Fausto Still

Fausto Film Difficulty Ranking: 4

Fausto isn’t like the usual films you’re used to. There’s no main characters and there’s no narrative that you can follow. Instead, Fausto is a collection of mysterious stories and images; some might fill you with wonder and others might just drift through you. It’s all in the name of searching for something bigger than ourselves – nature, the universe, magic.

From: Mexico, North America
Watch: Trailer
Next: Tabu, Serpentarius, Extraordinary Stories
Read The Full Review

Film Difficulty Ranking: 3

Image from The Bait

Another great film from the London Film Festival, The Bait explores the lives of a mix of people from Bengal. The Bait features an eclectic mix of characters: a young circus tightrope walker who tours the land with her parents, a postman who renounces his life to live up a tree with some monkeys, and a Rajah trying to capture his past glory by killing a tiger. There is magical realism, strong political undercurrents, and plenty of beautiful scenery.

Why Watch this Film?
  • For eccentric characters! One middle-aged man that dances in his palace, and another that lives up a tree with monkeys
  • See beautiful scenery – you’ll feel as if you’ve travelled to Bengal
  • It’s by an award winning Indian film maker – Buddhadeb Dasgupta
  • See the magic of anime brought to live action
The Breakdown

The film starts with old music playing from an old gramophone. An middle-aged man (the old Rajah) dances round and round a door frame in the middle of grassy hills. Is this a dream? Probably not. This is the eccentric Rajah, a man whose family has always held power in these lands until recently. His power is questioned by some documentary makers who do not believe he can catch a tiger.

The Rajah always plays old music, and always plays it on his old gramophone which he takes wherever he goes. The old music reminds him of the past glory of his family, something that is fading rapidly. He can’t even entertain his wife, a woman trapped in his palace. Instead of adapting to modernity, he tries to recapture his former glory by going on a quest to kill a tiger.

Outside of the three main characters, the film is dominated by the beautiful Bengali landscape. The rolling green hills, the dry lands, and the marshy swampland captures the diversity of Bengal (which is also captured in the characters). Instead of city noise, we hear birds, monkeys, water – everything that is lost in the city. The country is always full of life. The only evidence of built up civilisation were a few electricity pylons in the far background of one shot and the grand palace of the Rajah slowly being covered with moss.

The Bait is like a collection of fables. Each storyline portrays a different part of society, from the rich Rajah to the wandering street performers. Their social statuses are clear throughout and their identification creates the strong political undercurrent. Is there still a semi-caste system in India? Under the magical realism and humour, it seems that Dasgupta believes there still is.

Sleepwalking Land Film Difficulty Ranking: 3

Have you read Mia Couto’s brilliant post-colonial novel Sleepwalking Land? If you haven’t and you love reading, you should check it out now. If you haven’t got time to read, you can watch the film which does a great job at translating the novel onto the big screen. Check out the film here (Amazon).

Why Watch Sleepwalking Land?
  • It’s quicker than reading the book (although I recommend you read it if you have time)
  • If you like post-apocalyptic style stories
  • To learn about the effect of colonialism and war on Mozambique
  • If you like magical realism (made famous by Colombian author Gabriel Garcia Marquez)
The Breakdown

Sleepwalking Land starts with an old man (Tuahir) and a young boy (Muidinga) walking down a desolate dirt track. We are not told who they are or where they are going, but we can tell they are in danger. Not because, they are being targeted, but because they are roaming a war-torn country. They hide in the bushes as a gang of men bragging about killing people walk past and then reemerge to find a burned-out bus full of dead bodies. They decide to remove the bodies and call it their temporary home.

If you’re ever read or seen Cormac McCarthy’s The Road you might recognise this environment. In both The Road and Sleepwalking Land there’s an old man and a young boy roaming a desolate land trying to survive. But contrary to The Road where we know the two protagonists are father and son, the connection between the protagonists in Sleepwalking Land is never made clear.

However, we get a clue to their past lives from a journal that Muidinga finds by the burned-out bus belonging to a man named Kindzu. Each day, they read an extra chapter of the journal and immerse themselves in Kindzu’s story. For Tuahir, Kindzu’s life probably reminds him of his past life, which he has blocked from his memory. For Muidinga, Kindzu’s life gives him a possible explanation to his past which amnesia has prevented him from remembering.

Conclusion & What to Watch Next?

Teresa Prata’s adaptation of Mia Couto’s film is a worthy of your time. The main problem it faces is cutting the novel into 90mins, so if you’ve read the book you might think that the film crams in too much in too little time.

If you want to watch more films like this with characters wandering through desolate landscapes check out the post-apocalyptic The Road, which is good but bleak. You should also check out the art-house film Mimosas following wanderers from different centuries through the Moroccan mountains and deserts.

Or if it’s great African films you’re after, check out Abouna from Chad, a story about two sons searching for their lost Dad. There’s also Timbuktu, an Academy Award nominee from Mali where you’ll see the effect of the growing influence of Islamic fundamentalism on the Malian town.