by James Hansen
Police, Adjective - one of the major highlights at this year's New York Film Festival - opens in New York at IFC Center today. I wrote about the film in my round-ups of the festival, but I was also lucky enough to sit down with director Corneliu Porumboiu during the festival to discuss his approach in crafting this challenging film. The following is an edited conversation I had with Mr. Porumboiu on September 29, 2009 discussing the film, his cinematic influences, and, well, words.
James Hansen: How did the story come about?
Corneliu Porumboiu: There were two stories I heard that inspired me. One was about two brothers, one of whom betrayed the other in a small case about consuming hashish. The second story: I have a friend who is a police officer and he told me about case that he had where he decided he didn’t want to solve it because of his conscience.
JH: How much did the real events effect your stylistic choices for the film like the use of real-time during the police investigations?
CP: Doing research for the second draft of the script, I discovered that police officers have a lot of time - death time - waiting and surveilling. This was very important for me because it fits into the spirit that I wanted to give to the script and to the absurd tone of my movie. I take real time and it becomes an absurd time. The movie is about meaning and a policeman trying to get that sense in his world. The real time allowed me to construct that feeling.
JH: You mention the absurdist qualities of the film, which are infused with the realism. I wonder if this is what informs the comedy of both Police, Adjective and your earlier films?
CP: I think the comedy is really just coming with me. I don’t think before I make a movie as to whether it will be a comedy or something like that. It’s something that is in my point of view on life so it’s very natural.
JH: What your major influences were for this project?
CP: I had seen many police movies (policier) like All of Us, but for this particular movie I was influenced by Bresson’s Pickpocket and Antonioni’s Blow Up. Big parts of my movie are silent and the body language counts a lot. So, in the sense of both timing and atmosphere, I was thinking a lot about these two movies.
JH: Blow Up is an interesting choice since it is all about the dissection of an image, and in Police, Adjective it seems you invert the process by dissecting language. Can you talk about your approach to text and dialogue in the film and its relationship with the image, particularly in the final sequence and conversation with the dictionary?
CP: Blow Up is one of my favorite movies. I was thinking more about the technique in Blow Up for my first movie (12:08 East of Bucharest) in trying to define the revolution. In this case, when I was doing my research, I was seeing the daily reports from police officers. With these came the idea of representation that you can also see to some extent in Blow Up. You see what he’s doing everyday by what is written on the page. And it is just a representation of what happened that day. That was the first point when I started looking at language and words and what they really mean and what the express. You have this structure that repeats day after day after day, which is what leads into the final conversation.
JH: And that all leads into the final shot of the film, which I think is stunning. Can you talk about the idea behind the last shot and how it connects back to ideas of symbology, image, and text?
CP: As I mentioned before, it’s coming from those words and details and reports. They go into the word conscience and finally the word police. The drawing on the blackboard at the end gives you the absurd tone of the movie. Everything becomes a graphic. But I don’t believe so much in symbols. An image is dealing with an image. But it all goes back to the meaning of the words. And it’s a repetition leading to a certain kind of art. Plus, I prefer being a little cynical.
JH: Is your cynical approach to the search for answers and clarity in Police, Adjective related to your personal your views about Romania, whether before or after the revolution?
CP: For me personally, after the revolution, I was thinking all the changes would come the next day. I had quite a romantic point of view about it and life in general. Years after, I’ve become a more cynical. Maybe it’s the way things should be, but, for me, the expectations that I had were broken. For my research, I asked ten different friends to define the word conscience. There were so many different definitions! After that, I started to write and that was my idea in the end: what is in the back of these words? If it’s in a dictionary, I think it’s absurd, and that is the feeling I had writing and making this movie. What is the link to these words? What is the conscience of a society? It’s coming from this sentiment I have. The definitions [of conscience] were so different, but, at the same time, they express, as I feel, that in Romania we often don’t understand each other. The words are no use at the end.
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
An Interview with "Police, Adjective" Director Corneliu Porumboiu
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8 comments:
Enlightening interview!
I'm excited to finally get to see this, although it looks like I'll have to wait until February to catch a Nashville screening. Think the film will make your Top Ten?
It's pretty much a lock for mine. Glad you liked the interview! If I wasn't so nervous, I could have used the time a little more wisely, but I think it turned out pretty well!
I dig the interview. This might make my Top Ten, but probably as an honorable mention. Either way, kudos on the sit-down.
James, you a cinematic Santa Claus here on Christmas Eve as I scour the net looking for information on this tremendous film, which I saw last night (Wednesday) at the IFC Film Center at 9:35 P.M. Some impatient people have complained that "nothing happens" yet I was utterly mesmerized/riveted for it's close-to-two-hours running time, and the final 15 minutes was as powerful a sequence I've seen all year, definitely on par with the restaurant scene in 35 SHOTS OF RUM, the opening of ANTI-CHRIST and the scrapbook prologue of UP.
That's fantastic that you got to see this at the festival in September, and what an extraordinary achievement here to have this interview with Mr. Porumboiu. Great questions, fascinating responses, particularly his response to your query about the comedic elements all the critics are talking about.
POLICE ADJECTIVE is absolutely one of the ten best films of 2009.
Sam - Thanks so much for the kind Christmas words! Glad to be your cinematic Santa Clause tonight! It really is a terrific film. I'm going to take a friend when I get back to New York next week. You're spot on about those last fifteen or so minutes...totally riveting. And I happen to think the real-time is a marvelous turn on the genre (although some of my friends have thought otherwise...)
Happy holidays and thanks again for the comments!
Hey guys,
My visits have been sadly sporadic this year, in large part due to my decreasing acquaintance with contemporary cinema, which tends to get written up here quite a bit. Hence, I don't know much about this film but I keep seeing the poster pop up on various blogs and I'm enticed. It's one of the best I've seen in years.
Anyway, I'm hoping all & sundry will participate in my year-end round-up - I'm soliciting submissions from my "fellow travelers" based on what they consider their best work of the year (I tried to set myself up as judge, but as I said, my perusal and writing both have been erratic this year, so the democratic choose-it-yourself approach seems wiser ... plus if you pick a couple I can still allow myself the semblance of choice!)
Thanks & happy new year,
Joel (MovieMan0283)
Btw, here's the relevant post:
http://thesunsnotyellow.blogspot.com/2009/12/best-of-blogosphere.html
Great interview...I can't wait to check this film out. Thanks James!
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