It Must Be Heaven
Director: Elia Suleiman
FRANCE/QATAR/GERMANY/CANADA/ PALESTINE/TURKEY, 2019
Arabic, English, French w/ English subtitles 101 minutes
Principal Cast: Elia Suleiman, Gael García Bernal
A church in Nazareth with a door that won’t open. A deserted Paris. A New York supermarket with as many guns as fresh produce. In his fifth feature — which garnered a Jury Special Mention at Cannes 2019 — Elia Suleiman, a famed figure in Palestinian cinema, explores the world with his trademark, wide-eyed wonder — one that, here, belies an incisive critique of nationalism and identity.
Suleiman once again stars in his own film, personally investigating the meanings of being in exile and in search of a home. Opening in his native Palestine before moving to Paris and then New York, It Must Be Heaven comprises comedic vignettes, some darker than others. Suleiman embellishes small details in each, his style edging ever closer to the surreal, in an attempt to capture the experience of a perpetual outsider, and to suggest that normality is highly circumstantial — and often absurd. He also points to how biases in the real world are equally present in the film world, as It Must Be Heaven loosely follows Suleiman’s quest to get his film funded with one French producer telling Suleiman his idea “isn’t Palestinian enough.”
With a screen presence that has been compared to Buster Keaton’s, Suleiman lends a detached bemusement to his observation of the minute oddities of daily life — which, when reflected on, reveal so much more than most would like to admit.
“Whimsical and wistful yet infused with a yearn- ing for the stability of place, Heaven will have gates opened throughout the European indie circuit and potentially further afield.”
—Jay Weissberg, Variety
the Trailer!
No comments:
Post a Comment