Movies about Souvenir
It’s so well-made, but I had a terrible time watching it.
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5 min čtení
27. 2023
Suvenýr introduces us to Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne), a film student in London in the 80s who falls into an unhealthy romantic relationship. We watch as her world is turned upside down and how she seeks to regain her agency throughout.
I have to be honest, I hated watching this movie. I streamed it at home and couldn’t stay still. I kept pausing the movie so I could get up to get snacks or wash dishes — anything to get me out of this movie and out of Julie’s world. I haven’t had this difficult of a time watching a movie since I watched White Noise.
But because we were reviewing this movie for our podcast, Movies & Us, I had to actually pay attention to the film. I couldn’t phone this in because we were going to talk about it for an hour.
So, the way I decided to get through Suvenýr was to focus on individual components of the film rather than the film as a whole. And that’s when I started seeing just how magical it really is.
Jedna z mých oblíbených věcí Suvenýr is the cinematography. There are so many really beautiful shots in this film. There’s a half-wall in Julie’s flat that divides the kitchen from the dining area, which is used brilliantly. We often see one character on each side of the wall, each doing their own thing in this space — they are separate but together, and we can learn so much in those moments.
That half-wall also is covered with mirrors, which is also used incredibly effectively. So often, the camera is trained on a character’s reflection, which gives a different feeling than if we were looking at the character directly. We can observe them with a bit more distance and maybe even some reflection (do you see what I did there?).
My favorite shot comes at the very end of the film. Julie is directing a scene in the studio, and the camera begins with a wide shot where we can see everyone: Julie, the actress under the lights, and the camera with the cameraman. As the camera pans in on Julie, the camera in the scene begins to pan in on the actress. As we are drawing nearer to Julie, our vision is blocked momentarily by the camera and the camera operators.
One of this year’s best movies is about its own making
The Souvenir: Part II continues its director’s memoir project.
By Alissa Wilkinson @alissamarie Oct 29, 2021, 9:30am EDT
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Alissa Wilkinson zastřešuje film a kulturu pro Vox. Alissa je členkou New York Film Critics Circle a National Society of Film Critics.
Suvenýr was one of the greatest films of 2019, but its best revelations arrived off-screen — the wildest of which might have been about the set on which it was shot. We’re used to hearing about “thinly veiled” fiction based on the artist’s life, but this was something altogether pluckier. Director Joanna Hogg used Suvenýr to tell the story of a film student’s doomed romance with an alluring man she too-slowly realizes is addicted to heroin — a story based on her own memories.
And to underline just how close the plot hews to her recollections, Hogg had her fictionalized stand-in, Julie (played by Honor Swinton Byrne), live in a flat that was an exact replica of the one Hogg lived in when she was a film student.
That kind of precise facsimile is wild and time-consuming to create, and indicated that Suvenýr wasn’t just a fictionalized account “based on” Hogg’s memories; it embodied them. Swinton Byrne’s casting added another layer of reality-bending, as her real-life mother, Tilda Swinton, not only played Julie’s mother in the film but had been a close friend of Hogg’s in film school, starring in Hogg’s graduation thesis project. Sure, there were still actors, putting a little distance between Hogg (who doesn’t appear on screen) and her avatar in Julie. But those memories and that distance made Suvenýr, in essence, a memoir.
Imagine intentionally trying to reconstruct, visually, a time of great trauma, grief, and growth in your life. Hogg did it, as many filmmakers dipping into memoir have. Alfonso Cuarón did it in his 2018 film Roma; Kenneth Branagh does it in his upcoming film Belfast. Jennifer Fox says her 2018 film Příběh is a forthright memoir. Terrence Malick works in a deeply memoiristic mode in films like Tree of Life (2011) a Na zázrak (2012). Those are just a few examples. Each movie is built on memory, revisiting and evoking for the audience what it was like to live that filmmaker’s life.
For her new film, Hogg goes further, and in so doing makes one of 2021’s best movies. In The Souvenir: Part II — which picks up just after Suvenýr concludes — Julie, processing the death of her boyfriend Anthony (Tom Burke), attempts to make a film that is, well, Suvenýr: constructing an identical apartment set, casting a friend as herself, and so on.
Julie is still a student director, and she has a lot to learn. Her cinematographer, a classmate, grows frustrated by her unclear communication. Her parents are supportive but not entirely sure what she’s doing. The program directors tell her that her proposed project isn’t sufficiently precise, that she hasn’t made it clear to them what she aims to express.
Well, of course it’s not precise. Julie is using her film to sort out what she feels about Anthony, in life and in death. She’s not even sure anymore who he was — did he even work for the British Foreign Office, as he told everyone? Did he actually love her? What was he thinking before he died? She’s still searching, both for him and for herself.
Julie’s film — like Suvenýr (part one) — comprises her memories, moments told from her point of view. Her actors, though sympathetic to what she’s trying to do, are baffled as to why her characters act the way they do. So, in a sense, is she; why didn’t she see warning signs? Her crew is frustrated by her insistence on shooting scenes from the perspective of her own Julie stand-in, but it’s all she knows. It’s not a normal way to make a movie, for them. It’s also not an entirely normal way for us to experience one.
The memory-driven mode in which Julie is working is just far enough outside convention to be tricky for her and her crew to fathom, and the same might be true for her audience, too. Movies have long trained us to think that we’re seeing the action from a somewhat objective point of view. What it can see might be restricted, but it still records dispassionately. In most films, you expect that what you see on screen is what “happened,” at least in the world of the film. You don’t expect a camera to be an unreliable narrator, to miss things.
Of course, that’s certainly not true with all films. Many filmmakers across the world have experimented with the potential for a camera to record subjectivity, to show a version of a story through the eyes of a character rather than through its more omniscient lens. Even Hollywood movies toy with subjectivity. Ridley Scott’s Poslední souboj recently did this, drawing on a storytelling device mostly famously employed decades earlier by Akira Kurosawa’s Rašomon. Or consider the way Ron Howard’s Beautiful Mind sets up expectations of objectivity, then subverts them.
In films like these, we’re not literally seeing from the characters’ points of view, as if the camera is in their eyes — the character whose point of view is being represented physically appears onscreen. Instead, the film is capturing the “reality” that exists in their version of events. It’s their memories we’re watching.
Memory is awfully slippery and prone to error, as scientists and anyone who’s tried to tell a story about their own childhood with a parent present in the room can attest. You remember the dog being ugly or the argument being heated; your mother remembers something quite different. This is why the literary genre of memoir is distinct from biography. One presumes a more subjective point of view than the other; one aims to construct a story from memories, while the other leans on documents, histories, and recorded fact (yet there’s plenty of overlap between the two).
Suvenýr was Hogg’s memoir, with Julie functioning as a stand-in for Hogg herself. (Not too much would have changed about the way we watch the film if Hogg had called the character Joanna.) Now, in The Souvenir: Část II, Hogg adds another doll to the matryoshka. She’s processing her memories of, well, trying to process her memories.
For Hogg, memories — hers or Julie’s — are subtly linked to shifting color palettes. In the film’s earliest scenes, as Julie’s parents try desperately to buoy their daughter following Anthony’s death, the family is shown all sitting at a dinner table spread with white linens, wearing white clothing, in a very brightly lit dining room. Even the food (white fish, white potatoes) matches. In Julie’s memory, her parents are working hard to keep things light in the face of her monstrous devastation.
Not long after, an image of a little bright red blood accidentally smeared onto bedsheets gives way, in the next scene, to a flashy red car on a movie set. There’s a woman in the car, wearing a red dress, dabbing red lipstick onto her lips with her fingers, her nails painted a fiery shade to match. A few scenes later, Julie has handed out copies of her screenplay to the film program advisers, tied with bits of red ribbon.
Did all of these things look this way when they really happened? Only Joanna Hogg knows — or maybe she doesn’t. Maybe the memories have flashed back to her with this coloration because they’re imbued with a different emotion, even one that is hard to express. Suvenýr: Část II is in some ways a valentine to Hogg’s younger self, who was fumbling through her own messy emotions by making art. In her Suvenýr films, Hogg is doing the same thing once again, but this time with some distance, and the ability to see things, if not objectively, at least a little differently.
We experience reality from our own subjective vantage point, and that’s never more true than when we’re looking backward at our own experiences. That’s what Suvenýr: Část II explores — fumbling youthful attempts to make life into art, and then to make art back into life. (The film is a perfect pairing with Mia Hansen-Løve’s Ostrov Bergman, which also explores the way memories filter through the subconscious and surface in movies.)
And Hogg shows her hand in the most beautiful way. At the end of Suvenýr: Část II, Julie is throwing a birthday party in her flat, just as she did at the beginning of Suvenýr. She is a little older now, a little wiser, though she still has much to learn. At least now she knows it. She cuts cake, takes pictures of her friends, and looks happy. Then suddenly, the camera pulls back, and we realize we’re looking at people not in Julie’s “real” flat, but on the set of a movie.
As the camera pans left, we see a whole film crew standing outside the scene in which the revelers are acting out a party, watching, with equipment and catering tables set up. They’re on a soundstage. We hear a voice yell “Cut!” and the screen goes black. I suspect it’s Hogg’s voice, reminding us once again that sometimes, the best we can do with our hurt is find a way to make a story of it, and give it, as a hard-won gift, to others.
Suvenýr: Část II otevře v kinech 29. října.
Ve Vox věříme, že jasnost je síla a že moc by neměla být dostupná pouze těm, kteří si mohou dovolit zaplatit. Proto necháváme naši práci zdarma. Miliony lidí se spoléhají na jasnou a vysoce kvalitní žurnalistiku společnosti Vox, aby pochopily síly, které formují dnešní svět. Podpořte naši misi a pomozte udržet Vox zdarma pro všechny tím, že dnes Vox finančně přispějete.
A shy but ambitious film student (Honor Swinton Byrne) begins to find her voice as an artist while navigating a turbulent courtship with a charismatic but untrustworthy man (Tom Burke). She defies her protective mother (Tilda Swinton) and concerned friends as she slips deeper and deeper into an intense, emotionally fraught relationship that comes dangerously close to destroying her dreams. From acclaimed writer-director Joanna Hogg comes an enigmatic and personal portrait of the artist as a young woman, combining passionate emotions and exquisite aesthetics into a lush, dreamlike story of young adulthood and first love. At once enrapturing and mysteriously unsettling—and featuring a profoundly layered breakout performance by Honor Swinton Byrne—Suvenýr is an essential and enduring film from one of our most distinctive and exciting filmmakers.
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