Competition
Dir. Václav Havel
“Leaving” is the feature film
version of the Vaclav Havel’s play, the draught of which he had written
in the late ‘80s. At that time the play wasn’t completed since the
author had been driven away with something more important: the former
dissident, persecuted writer and a political prisoner took the helm of
the Velvet Revolution, which ended years of Communistic regime in
Czechoslovakia and brought him into the chair of the president of the
Republic. But the demonstrative theatrical architecture of the film
bears some more profound rationale. If, as Shakespere states, all the
world’s a stage, politics are stage twice.
“
"Leaving” is the
seriocomical grotesque or rather political pamphlet. No wonder the plot
is loaded with lots of citations and allusions at the classical plays –
from “The Cherry Orchard” to “King Lear” and even “Hamlet”. The story is
focused around Vilém Rieger (Josef Abrham) - the newly dismissed
chancellor of an unnamed country (though one shouldn’t look for any
similarity between the protagonist and the author). The scene is laid at
the premises of his beautiful country residence in the cherry orchard.
Rieger, humiliated by sad circumstances of resignation, is told to make a
crucial choice: either leave his comfortable state-owned villa or
publicly support his successor, Vlastik Klein – his most hated political
opponent.
The main hero is surrounded by whimsical figures of
his family members, servants, the former secretary and a couple of
ubiquitous paparazzi, who play not the last role in the chancellor’s
future.
Among the brilliant cast Havel's wife, actress Dagmar
Havlova must be singled out as his screen wife Irene. Though 74-years
old Havel is a debutant in filmmaking, he is not an occasional person in
cinema. The Havel family is closely connected with Czech film; his
uncle Miloš built the famous Barrandov film studios, and his grandfather
opened Lucerna Palace the first permanent cinema-theatre in Prague.
By
the way, Havel says he won’t stand behind the camera anymore; but in
this film he appears in a funny prankish cameo, summing up the message
of the picture, which can be in other words put as follows: what
frustrate the lives of those no longer in office may be less the loss of
power than the loss of a sense of purpose, that is human impotence at
finding oneself.
Nina Tsyrkun
01-07-2011
Leaving / Odcházení
Published in
Festivals