AFI Fest 2007: Day Two – Cinematic Oppression
November 20, 2007 by Danny Baldwin
Filed under Columns / Blogs
Looking over the screenings that I had lined up for my second day at AFI Fest 2007, I kept thinking about how impossible it would be for me to find a common theme between my selections in order to start writing about them. After all, what the hell would a post-apocalyptic American sci-fi allegory by Richard “Donnie Darko” Kelly, a Lebonese romantic comedy by first-time writer/director Nadine Labaki, and a Palme d’Or-winning Romanian abortion-drama by Cristian Mungiu all have in common? And yet, strangely, I found a very noticeable uniting theme between the three works as I watched them, a driving concept explored by each of them: government oppression. As diverse as these films are and as different as they wish to be, they are all deeply rooted in the same subject. Not surprisingly, their success as motion pictures directly corresponds with how accurately and insightfully they depict said government oppression. [Read more]
