DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Being a Human Person

Auspicious documentary explores the life and work of acclaimed Swedish auteur Roy Andersson - in cinemas and Curzon Home Cinema on Friday, October 16th (premiere in Camden on Wednesday, September 16th)

The films of Roy Andersson may seem impenetrable to some. His deader-than-deadpan highly-stylised brand of comedy has been a festival darling for the past 20 years, but its slow-paced nature is definitely not everyone’s cuppa. Fred Scott’s feature, while clearly designed with the fans in mind, provides enough context to spike the interest of non-converts.

Centred around the production of About Endlessness – Andersson’s 2019 film announced as his swansong – this documentary zigzags back and forth in time, delving into the director’s youth, themes, obsessions and work method. It also gives plenty of screen time to his closest crew members, who provide a warts-and-all diary of what it’s like to work with a highly creative person who thinks he might be reaching his artistic endpoint.

Despite its runtime of 90 minutes and its breadth, Scott’s film feels like a featurette – additional material to one of its subject’s films. The viewer who looks beyond that promotional sheen will find an emotional portrait of contemporary cinema’s ultimate voyeur. The 76-year-old director is infatuated with people and the human condition. He can’t help but watch them. And depict them as he sees fit.

His vision of the world made him sick of his early success, drove him into becoming an independent filmmaker and eventually manifested itself in an idiosyncratic cinematic style. It also came at the cost of meaningful long-term personal relationships and aggravated a drinking addiction which seems unsolvable – topics the film pursuits fearlessly.

The scenes he and his team manage to pull off in a small studio in central Stockholm are nothing short of extraordinary. His extremely tactile cinema – wholly dependent on handcrafted sets – aligns him in the tradition of the art’s forerunners, such as George Meliès. Andersson, however, is not looking at other beings and worlds. He is transfixed by all the highs and lows (particularly the lows) of human life on Earth.

The struggle to finish his latest feature provides some sort of narrative backbone to the documentary, which follows the director as he frustrates his crew, checks into rehab only to give up two weeks later and travels to festivals in order to engage with his audience. His health deteriorates considerably within that time span. By the time About Hopelessness finally debuts in Venice – after reshoots prevented it from doing so in Berlin earlier that year – the director is almost wheelchair-bound and must confront his mortality on his own terms.

Ultimately, Being a Human Person presents Roy Andersson as every single one of his characters: utterly flawed, defined by both pleasure and pain. While overtly traditional in form, Scott’s documentary offers a a one of a kind opportunity too see cinema master both engaged and off guard.

Being a Human Person premieres at Curzon x Camden Market on Wednesday, September 16th. It is out in cinemas and on Curzon Home Cinema on Friday, October 16th.


By Lucas Pistilli - 15-09-2020

Lucas Pistilli is a Brazilian-born journalist, currently based in Italy, with a passion for cinema and film criticism. He graduated and started out as a lawyer, before branching out to journalism in s...

DMovies Poll

Are the Oscars dirty enough for DMovies?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Most Read

Forget Friday the 13th, Paranormal Activity and the [Read More...]
Just a few years back, finding a film [Read More...]
A lot of British people would rather forget [Read More...]
Pigs might fly. And so Brexit might happen. [Read More...]
Sexual diversity is at the very heart of [Read More...]
Films quotes are very powerful not just because [Read More...]

Read More

Lenita – Traces of a Lady

Dácio Pinheiro
2024

Victor Fraga - 02-05-2024

Finely crafted documentary rescues the work and the personal history of a pioneering however long-forgotten fashion-photographer-turned-horse-breeder from Brazil [Read More...]

Poor Things where you never expected!

 

Pedro Garcia - 01-05-2024

Our reader Pedro Garcia came across Yorgos Lanthimos's dirty movie Poor Things in a very unexpectedly clean place: Disney Plus; he shares his thoughts about the peculiar experience [Read More...]

The 4 dirtiest love scenes in 50 Shades of Grey

 

Mariana Hallquist - 01-05-2024

Our reader Mariana Hallquist dissects the controversial sexual psychothriller from 2015, and reveals the steamy, the unexpected and the downright filthy scenes (including their timecode!) [Read More...]

Facebook Comment

Website Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *