Saturday 5 October 2013

From Uruguay: The Silent House (2010)


To attempt a film shot in entirely one single take, a feature length one, is an impressive task. Alexander Sokurov when making Russian Ark (2002), the famous film for doing this, had to do a second take in making the film and start at the beginning of a back breaking piece of labour for everyone on and behind the camera involved. Even something as small as the original version of The Silent House, with only a couple of actors and a single location, must have been a difficult task that should at least be praised for undertaking the goal. Even if invisible cuts were made, as the guy at the till I bought a copy of this film from told me to hunt out for, whether they're there or not having never checked for them, it is still applaudable how the making of the film was done. Set at a house of a man who wants to sell it, his brother and niece go to clean it up for resell only for it to be obvious that there is something wrong with inside the building. The whole process of a single, continually moving camera that never cuts to a new scene does have a tremendous effect. The advantage the film has is that it never falls over when it comes to this potential gimmick - the only time the camera shakes is when the cameraman clearly has to catch up to someone who is running. It creates an immense amount of tension as the female protagonist is moving hesitantly around the lightless rooms of the house; at first you concentrate on the fact that the camera is still rolling, an edit to a new shot as one expects to happen, from growing up with the rule that all films should do this, not happening, but eventually it sucks you into a mood that is intense. It's a lesson I learnt, and other people found, if they ever came attuned to Hungarian director Bela Tarr. The small scale of the film, its subtlety, is emphasised by how it prefers small shocks and moments of creepiness for most of its length. It feels that for three quarters of its length, The Silent House will succeed...
...then it trips before the finishing line and does so in such immense gruesomeness that it splits its skull open and spills brain matter on said line. I have seen this film twice now in quick succession to each viewing, spectacular for me since I am not fond of viewing something again unless even up to a year's gap has passed, because its final twist is so abrupt that I had to see if it made any sense in the context of the rest of the film beforehand. It is set up, but it's an example desiring an extra twist to get the viewer on their toes that sabotages the entire film, a pointless addition of drama when the supernatural edge should have been enough, and was effective, for earlier. Even with the virtues of the film before the twist, the structure of the movie means the ending ruins its whole. Even if it's clearly set up early, even if the film claims to be based on a true story, its presentation feels as if they weren't confident with the material and tacked in an ending turn that feels like a desperate, cheap grab for attention. No matter how well done a work it is, The Silent House is very much a film that stands and falls on said end, and it botches the entirety of it in a way that is despairing in the squandered failure. The result cannot be done in a second take now like that filming process could have done, and you're stuck with it.

From http://www.the-filmreel.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/silent_house_2010_03.jpg

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