IT MUST BE HEAVEN
Paul Byrnes, The Age Spectrum, 4 JULY 2020
Rated M, 97 minutes
It is an autobiographical comedy in three locations, by turns satirical, slapstick, and rueful. Suleiman plays a version of himself, leaving Nazareth for Paris after the deaths of his parents, moving to the US, then returning ‘‘home’’ – except there is no real home for this Palestinian. Nazareth in northern Israel is never identified as the first location: you have to guess. That’s perhaps one of Suleiman’s over-developed artistic tendencies – he doesn’t want to spoonfeed us, so he sometimes tells us too little. That is also what some people love about his films – the open-endedness, the possibility of many readings, the inscrutability.
Paul Byrnes, The Age Spectrum, 4 JULY 2020
Rated M, 97 minutes
★★★½
Palestinian
director Elia Suleiman is hardly prolific, having made only three other
features and a few documentaries and shorts in 30 years, but his work
is worth the wait. It Must Be Heaven is the fourth feature, and it explains to some extent the long gaps in getting things made.It is an autobiographical comedy in three locations, by turns satirical, slapstick, and rueful. Suleiman plays a version of himself, leaving Nazareth for Paris after the deaths of his parents, moving to the US, then returning ‘‘home’’ – except there is no real home for this Palestinian. Nazareth in northern Israel is never identified as the first location: you have to guess. That’s perhaps one of Suleiman’s over-developed artistic tendencies – he doesn’t want to spoonfeed us, so he sometimes tells us too little. That is also what some people love about his films – the open-endedness, the possibility of many readings, the inscrutability.
It’s
not necessary to share that view to enjoy his humour, humanity and
intelligence. He has been compared to Jacques Tati and Buster Keaton, in
that he is the fool in the middle of most of his scenes, waiting to be
poleaxed by life. There are a couple of moments that make clear his debt
to those geniuses, hence my word slapstick, but most of his humour is
more cerebral. An example is the scene in which tanks roll through the
streets of Paris. It’s unexplained, chilling and ‘‘funny’’ only in its
incongruity.
Behind the humour, there is a melancholy examination of the idea of permanent exile. Suleiman’s character is no longer comfortable in Nazareth, where Palestinians now predominate, and where he grew up. He finds that Paris and New York, where he goes to escape, are not quite ‘‘home’’ either.
Behind the humour, there is a melancholy examination of the idea of permanent exile. Suleiman’s character is no longer comfortable in Nazareth, where Palestinians now predominate, and where he grew up. He finds that Paris and New York, where he goes to escape, are not quite ‘‘home’’ either.
His
character does not speak for the first half. He walks in eerily
deserted streets in Nazareth, in a straw hat that never leaves his head.
With his owlish glasses and beard, he looks like an Orthodox priest –
and that’s perhaps intentional. Suleiman is from the ‘‘Roum’’ Greek
Orthodox community in Israel, and the first scene is an irreverent joke
about an Orthodox ceremony that goes wrong.
The
only hint that his parents have died is a brief visit to the cemetery,
and the empty house to which he returns. Gangs of armed youths roam the
empty streets, freaking him out, so he leaves for Paris, where the
streets are just as empty – except for all the pretty girls who stroll
past in the sun, wearing flimsy dresses and showing their legs. Nina
Simone sings ‘‘I put a spell on you’’ in this scene – a song he used in
an earlier film.
A few of his actors are familiar too, suggesting continuity with his most recent features – The Time that Remains (2009) and Divine Intervention (2002). As if to explain the long time between, the straw-hatted man meets with a Paris producer, who’s full of praise for his work, but offers absolutely no money. We have a commitment to Palestinian film, he explains, but your film is perhaps not ‘‘Palestinian enough’’.
Suleiman
has made more accessible films than this, but he has never been
conventional. This is another hybrid – part essay film, part odyssey,
not quite a travelogue, more like a psychic jigsaw. You have to put the
pieces together yourself, and that is against all popular modes of
current filmmaking. The mood is superbly sustained by emptying most of
the locations of people (astounding, given some of the places he got
closed down for filming, such as the entrance to the Louvre). It’s a
soulful sort of comedy, rather than a thigh-slapper, but thoughtful is
always better than its alternative.
A few of his actors are familiar too, suggesting continuity with his most recent features – The Time that Remains (2009) and Divine Intervention (2002). As if to explain the long time between, the straw-hatted man meets with a Paris producer, who’s full of praise for his work, but offers absolutely no money. We have a commitment to Palestinian film, he explains, but your film is perhaps not ‘‘Palestinian enough’’.
Suleiman’s
observations on Paris and New York are wry, sometimes sharp, more
expansively funny. Every person in the New York deli where he shops
carries a weapon – even the children. Cops in Paris chase citizens
through the streets on monowheels and roller skates. A French ambulance
crew serves a homeless man with a full meal – chicken or fish – followed
by coffee, before moving on. That idea of ‘‘no place’’ runs through a
lot of these jokes, but quietly, with a tinge of chaos.
Paul Byrnes
----------------------------------------------------------------
The 'perfect stranger' explores the power of silence
Wherever you go, there you are. It is one of the truisms of
travel: that you bring more than just physical baggage with
you. But Palestinian filmmaker Elia Suleiman magnifies the
idea in his deceptively winsome comedy It Must Be Heaven.
Wherever he goes, Suleiman – who plays himself, albeit more
flummoxed by the world than he seems to be in real life –
finds himself in a version of Palestine.
Helicopters whirr overhead in New York; ordinary citizens are inexplicably armed to the teeth in Paris; nothing seems to make sense anywhere. "My feeling is that the Palestinians might be one of the most oppressed and occupied peoples in the world today, but I can also say that unfortunately there are many layers and levels of occupations," he says. "Not only military, but also economic and psychological (ones)."
Suleiman is 60. His character on screen, established in his
2002 film Divine Intervention, hardly ever speaks.
"This time I said 'Nazareth' when the taxi driver asks where
I'm from, and, 'I'm Palestinian'.
They're not even words. They're codes," he says. "I think that, as much as you can do with an image, why do you need words? It's always a challenge to limit and censor information, but I cannot stand giving information in a film; I find that extremely boring. I prefer to leave things in the poetic. So I try to reduce as much as possible and let the cinema do what it can do."
Helicopters whirr overhead in New York; ordinary citizens are inexplicably armed to the teeth in Paris; nothing seems to make sense anywhere. "My feeling is that the Palestinians might be one of the most oppressed and occupied peoples in the world today, but I can also say that unfortunately there are many layers and levels of occupations," he says. "Not only military, but also economic and psychological (ones)."
Similar tension and
anxiety reign everywhere, he says. "Palestine becomes an
elastic form of oppression."
They're not even words. They're codes," he says. "I think that, as much as you can do with an image, why do you need words? It's always a challenge to limit and censor information, but I cannot stand giving information in a film; I find that extremely boring. I prefer to leave things in the poetic. So I try to reduce as much as possible and let the cinema do what it can do."
The silence and melancholy that underlie his sense of the
ridiculous might suggest Suleiman is paying homage to Chaplin;
he could be a modern version of Chaplin's tramp, fortified
against misadventure with books and a frequent flyer card. "But
I think what's interesting about this is that I did not watch a
lot of films in my life," he says. It could be, he muses, that
he is just catching up with the past. "Maybe the silent part is
coming as if I were living a century ago." Although he has an
abiding love of old westerns, he doesn't watch a lot of films,
even now. "I don't know what it is that I do a lot of. Maybe
smoking and drinking."
For him, these things are a sort of work. After all, the human oddities chronicled in It Must Be Heaven are mostly garnered from life as seen from a succession of cafe tables. "If you come and sit with me in a cafe, you will see the same things I'm seeing," he says. "You just have to be alert and watch and daydream and space out and then come back. It's really a job with the features of unemployment; you have to do absolutely nothing, then take in stuff that's happening."
That is exactly the sense Suleiman wanted to convey. He chose
Paris and New York as his character's boltholes because he had
lived in each of them for 14 years, so he didn't marvel at them
as a tourist would. "There is a kind of cross-border existence
going on with quite a lot of us," he says. "This is about
migration, not only of the unfortunate who drown in the sea, but
also of the middle classes, who are now trapped in a sense of
alienation about who they are and where they want to be."
As a fellow drinker slurs at Elia Suleiman's character in a New York bar, after taking in his recent zip around the world: "Are you the perfect stranger?"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edition No. 307 - 27 JUNE-3 JULY 2020 The Saturday Paper
Elia Suleiman’s It Must Be Heaven, which won the Jury Prize at Cannes last year but due to the Covid-19 crisis is only now getting a theatrical release in Australia, begins with an Orthodox priest in Nazareth leading his Easter congregation through a narrow alley of the old city. The believers are chanting as they approach an ancient church gate. The priest raps on the doors, only to be denied permission to enter. We don’t know why approval has been denied. We only hear the voices of the guards inside. Like a boxer preparing to enter the ring, the priest removes his koukoulion, rolls up the sleeves of his robe and walks into the church through a back entrance. We hear the sounds of the priest slapping the guards and we hear the men’s pleading and apologies. The priest flings the gate open and the congregation recommences its chanting, entering the church.
As always, nimbly and with a wicked comic sense, Suleiman introduces us to the surreal world of Palestinian existence, where the threat of violence always simmers just below the surface of the everyday, and where regulations and prohibitions are often unnamed and seemingly ridiculous. He is deeply influenced by two of the greatest comic directors in cinema history, Buster Keaton and Jacques Tati, and like those filmmakers creates meticulous absurdist worlds of authority and surveillance. Suleiman shares Tati’s great talent to imagine and then create his own idiosyncratic spatial architecture, so the world we view in his films is at once familiar and strange.
In It Must Be Heaven he utilises highly stylised and elegantly composed tableaus, in which he is always a silent observer. Two hard-drinking men berate a waiter for daring to serve a meal doused in alcohol to their sister. Are they offended on behalf of their sibling, or is it a ploy to get some free drinks? A man picks fruit from a neighbour’s citrus tree, and then waters and tends to the garden. Are his intentions honourable or is it an attempt to appropriate his neighbour’s plot? We get the sense every interaction involves second-guessing, and that daily life is a constant negotiation of conflict.
Suleiman directs his actors to be deliberately theatrical in their gestures and performances, again emphasising a state in which everyone is aware of being under constant observation. Yet, as with the priest in the opening scene, Suleiman never condescends to or stands in self-righteous judgement of his characters.
This article was first published in the print edition of The
Saturday Paper on
Jun 27, 2020 as "Heaven’s stakes".
For him, these things are a sort of work. After all, the human oddities chronicled in It Must Be Heaven are mostly garnered from life as seen from a succession of cafe tables. "If you come and sit with me in a cafe, you will see the same things I'm seeing," he says. "You just have to be alert and watch and daydream and space out and then come back. It's really a job with the features of unemployment; you have to do absolutely nothing, then take in stuff that's happening."
One of his most bitterly
funny encounters is with a Parisian producer who was excited by
the idea of making a film by a Palestinian director until he
read it and realised it was a comedy. Like many of the vignettes
in It Must Be Heaven, this is a slightly embroidered
version of a real event. "It happened when I was trying to
finance my first film in the '90s," he says. "The idea that a
Palestinian makes a film that has humour was not exactly welcome
in the 'lefty' world in Europe, because they are the patrons of
the Palestinian cause." The problem, explains the po-faced
producer (played by Vincent Maraval, one of his producers in
real life), is that his script just isn't Palestinian enough.
Why, it could have happened anywhere!
As a fellow drinker slurs at Elia Suleiman's character in a New York bar, after taking in his recent zip around the world: "Are you the perfect stranger?"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edition No. 307 - 27 JUNE-3 JULY 2020 The Saturday Paper
In his latest film, It Must Be
Heaven, Elia Suleiman continues to explore the
absurdity and tragedy of being Palestinian, and weaves in a
moving contemplation of the ageing body.
By Christos Tsiolkas.
Elia Suleiman’s It Must Be Heaven
Elia Suleiman’s It Must Be Heaven, which won the Jury Prize at Cannes last year but due to the Covid-19 crisis is only now getting a theatrical release in Australia, begins with an Orthodox priest in Nazareth leading his Easter congregation through a narrow alley of the old city. The believers are chanting as they approach an ancient church gate. The priest raps on the doors, only to be denied permission to enter. We don’t know why approval has been denied. We only hear the voices of the guards inside. Like a boxer preparing to enter the ring, the priest removes his koukoulion, rolls up the sleeves of his robe and walks into the church through a back entrance. We hear the sounds of the priest slapping the guards and we hear the men’s pleading and apologies. The priest flings the gate open and the congregation recommences its chanting, entering the church.
As always, nimbly and with a wicked comic sense, Suleiman introduces us to the surreal world of Palestinian existence, where the threat of violence always simmers just below the surface of the everyday, and where regulations and prohibitions are often unnamed and seemingly ridiculous. He is deeply influenced by two of the greatest comic directors in cinema history, Buster Keaton and Jacques Tati, and like those filmmakers creates meticulous absurdist worlds of authority and surveillance. Suleiman shares Tati’s great talent to imagine and then create his own idiosyncratic spatial architecture, so the world we view in his films is at once familiar and strange.
In It Must Be Heaven he utilises highly stylised and elegantly composed tableaus, in which he is always a silent observer. Two hard-drinking men berate a waiter for daring to serve a meal doused in alcohol to their sister. Are they offended on behalf of their sibling, or is it a ploy to get some free drinks? A man picks fruit from a neighbour’s citrus tree, and then waters and tends to the garden. Are his intentions honourable or is it an attempt to appropriate his neighbour’s plot? We get the sense every interaction involves second-guessing, and that daily life is a constant negotiation of conflict.
Suleiman directs his actors to be deliberately theatrical in their gestures and performances, again emphasising a state in which everyone is aware of being under constant observation. Yet, as with the priest in the opening scene, Suleiman never condescends to or stands in self-righteous judgement of his characters.
The first of Suleiman’s films I saw was
2002’s Divine Intervention, and it was revelatory,
firstly because of Suleiman’s phenomenal control as a filmmaker,
and also for daring to make comedy out of one of the most
intractable and unjust of all global conflicts, the denial of a
homeland for the Palestinian people. Divine Intervention,
which won the Jury Prize at Cannes in the year of its release, had
the shock of the innovative when I saw it. I had never before
quite felt that permission to laugh at a situation – the plight of
the Palestinians – that had always been depicted with utmost
seriousness or tragic weight. Seven years later Suleiman made The
Time That Remains, which I think is an even greater film.
The comedy is still there, as is the bemusement, but that film
reaches back into Suleiman’s own family history to evoke the
tragedy of the Palestinians’ dispossession by Israel since 1948.
It Must Be Heaven doesn’t have
the audacious jolt for an audience that Divine Intervention did,
nor does it have the operatic sweep of The Time That Remains.
It is a much quieter film. Playing himself in the film, Suleiman
leaves Nazareth for Paris and New York to try to get some money to
finance a film. There is a great sequence in Paris where he is
politely and with excruciating pomposity told by a film producer
that his new script isn’t “Palestinian enough”. There is also some
delightful poking fun at the absurdity of European Union laws,
capturing both the benign and coercive aspects to much
contemporary regulation.
However, though the Parisian scenes are
as scrupulously composed as those in Nazareth, they seem static in
comparison. We understand that Suleiman is being tongue in cheek
in inserting himself in depopulated vistas of Notre Dame and the
Louvre, but there are no comic payoffs or great insights generated
from those moments. They remain pretty postcards. Apart from the
obnoxious film producer, there aren’t any other distinctive
characters in these sequences for Suleiman to play against, and
this also accentuates the shapelessness of the scenes. I adore the
weathered grace of Suleiman’s face, but he isn’t physically as
capable a performer as Keaton or Tati. The film feels shambolic in
this middle section.
Thankfully, the pace picks up when
Suleiman arrives in New York. He seems genuinely fascinated by the
contradictions of the United States, where violence is as endemic
as in his homeland but where ethnic and racial singularity is
corporatised. His puzzled reactions to a supermarket full of
shoppers with guns, and to a conference of Palestinian artists
that seems as much an evangelical revival meeting as it does a
political discussion, form some of the funniest sequences in the
film.
There’s also a wonderfully facetious
cameo by Gael García Bernal, who is also in the US trying to drum
up money for a film he wants to make about the colonisation of
Mexico. Deftly, humorously, Suleiman and Bernal communicate their
solidarity as non-Western filmmakers as well as the inevitable
competition and division that come from their scrambling for
money. This self-reflexivity skirts dangerously close to
indulgence but it is tempered by a moving acknowledgement by
Suleiman of the wearing effects of age on both dreams and
aspirations. This is true for him as a filmmaker and as a
Palestinian.
Age, and the limitations of the body, are
themes subtly woven into It Must Be Heaven. They
culminate in a scene where Suleiman visits a tarot card reader,
and we hear the clairvoyant’s answer to a question that is never
asked in the film but is central to everything we have witnessed.
“Yes,” the fortune teller exclaims triumphantly, “There will be a
Palestine.” And then with the turning of another card, he adds
sadly, “But neither of us will be alive to see it.”
This contemplation of age makes sense of
a scene in Paris that has troubled some reviewers of the film.
Suleiman sits at a cafe and, in an extended slow-motion montage,
we share his point of view as a parade of stylish and attractive
women walk past. Ostensibly, the scene grates as a stereotypically
sexist fetishising of young women. But I think Suleiman is very
much aware of what he is doing here. If any of the women notice
him, it is only to turn away in disdain. For the young women he
might as well not exist. It is the film’s coda that makes sense of
this scene, and also makes sense of the constant tension between
observing and being observed – of having to perform being
Palestinian – that is at the heart of Suleiman’s filmmaking.
In the final scene, Suleiman has returned
to Nazareth and is getting drunk at a bar. A group of young
Palestinians are dancing. They are straight and they are queer.
The music shifts and it is a dance remix of the song “Arabiyon
Ana” by Lebanese singer Yuri Mrakadi. The title translates to “I
am an Arab” and the defiance of the song’s lyrics is echoed in the
ecstatic response of the dancers. The music rises and the bodies
move in sensual unison in the crammed bar. The euphoria of the
moment returns us to the beginning of the film, to the more muted
rapture of the Orthodox Christian chanting. It’s a different form
of resurrection from that pledged to by the priest, but it is
still a promise. The music becomes louder and louder.
As in the Paris cafe sequence, Suleiman
is the old man, always the outsider, watching from his corner. It
is exhilarating and it is deeply affecting. His desire doesn’t
need to be spoken out loud. The old man is hoping that these young
people will one day have what the Parisians and the New Yorkers
take for granted. He is praying that these children will have a
homeland, that one day they will see a Palestine.
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