On the Way to School
All the charm and affection of Être et Avoir seen through the eyes of a young Turkish teacher just finding his feet.
Orhan Eskiköy, Özgür Do?an
Orhan Eskiköy and Özgu?r Do?an both graduated from the Faculty of Communication at Ankara University. In 2001, they co-directed their first documentary Each Dream is a Shattered Mirror, which was officially selected for the IDFA First Appearance and the Cinéma du Réel Documentary Film Festival. They continued their collaboration on both Suffering (2003) and Together (2006), before making On the Way to School.
2009 Archive
Festival Diary: June
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#1 Amy Shields / Monday 22 June, 2009 / 13:49 GMT
#2 Moray Nairn / Monday 22 June, 2009 / 23:44 GMT
#3 Moray Nairn / Monday 22 June, 2009 / 23:47 GMT
For a director who spent a whole year at the school, that there are only a few episodes of footage of Emre trying to teach is revelatory in itself. It's simply a hopeless prospect and as the film progresses we are left more and more often to observe the children amusing themselves with universal games of targeting and throwing, or unstructured snippets of family members helping the children out of their uniforms.
The film meanders towards a conclusion in which you feel poor Emre must make some sort of cathartic breakthrough in his self-proclaimed goal to teach the kids to read and write in Turkish (let alone speak it...) but even this is denied. Instead the teacher's own growing isolation is painted by his frequent phone calls home and his almost total lack of anything to relate - his emotional experience appears as barren as the plateaus to which he has been exported.
It's not all bad news however. The film does just about enough to keep you watching, if only in the expectation that things must get better. The harsh continental climate of Kurdistan is ably reflected with loving shots of late autumn sun streaming through dirty windows and illuminating shafts of dust-filled light. The summer corn is scythed during harvest in what may be a slightly artificial attempt to portray the Kurds as stereotyped farmers, and animal husbanders - we do get to see them watching TV earlier, and in the midst of this rural nightmare, Emre clings to his mobile phone. You can take the urbanite out of the city but.....
(Continued in next post)
#4 Moray Nairn / Monday 22 June, 2009 / 23:48 GMT
Overall, the film is worth seeing even if only to witness a stranger's experience of an even stranger land, but where as there is plenty of observation, the crucial factor of the finest documentary making - insight - is sadly lacking.
END
#5 Niladri Bose / Wednesday 24 June, 2009 / 11:15 GMT
Fantastic technique , the director made it look very easy but I would imagine that it is very difficult to film children in a classroom in a non intrusive way.
Documentary films , in my opinion , should not pontificate on the subject and should be a mere spectator of events. Allowing the audience to makeup thier own minds , to excercise the brain cells. Exactly what chekhov did with storytelling and this film does with a documentary .
I loved the fact that there was no political commentary about who was right (and who was wrong) , as we don't always know the right answer .
The directors answer might not be the correct answer anyway.
Spoonfeeding is not required in meaningful cinema.