ILO ILO, a
film analysis by Wan Zhong Wei (U1030286D)
Ilo Ilo (2013) |
Ilo Ilo has
been widely reviewed by many critics, it helps a lot when the film won Camera d'Or for the best first feature
film in Cannes 2013, the hype generated during the month of June was enough to
propel more critics to write about the film objectively, and lots of social
media platforms to talk about it. The publicity efforts from the producing team
were strong as well. Ilo Ilo is a very well marketed film in Singapore, closing
following behind Jack Neo. Family ties, kinship, remembering the past, these
are the sure recipes right now in making a good local film, as everyone is kept
busy remembering the past, lamenting upon how fast paced the society is. I
would like to put Ilo Ilo through my personal perspective and will rather dwell
less on the synposis and progress of the film. Go watch it!
Anthony
Chen received his education in Ngee Ann's Film Sound and Video, before taking
up a scholarship from MDA to enroll into National Film and Television School in
UK, having a Masters in Film Directing. If one would take a look at Chen's
filmography, we notice that a particular number of his past works had Benoit
Soler credited as the cinematographer, a French based DP, which explains the
French style of handheld cinematography, the use of one takes and the use of voyeuristic
perspectives from the lens to communicate Chen's director vision to the big
screen.
In Chen's
recent work Karang Guni, he explores the relationship between a rag-and-bone
man and a runaway Chinese maid. Based on the recent works, Chen loves to
explore stories based on maids, foreign workers and everyday life. It is
intriguing because these workers are just everyday people that goes pass the
lives of the busy Singaporean, un-noticed, however the stories that evokes from
it is usually intimate. Chen's experience with his domestic helper in the past
has propelled him to make the film Ilo Ilo, basing on his own real life
experience and adding in bits and pieces of the local flavour into the film to
essentially create a masterpiece onto the big screen.
Karang Guni (2012) |
The Camera
d'Or might come as a big surprise to some, and many were quick to be cynical
about Chen's achievement, the sense of the art house filmic look which appealed
to the jury, and the topic on maids, family issues with a bit of conflict has
always tipped well with the jury in the past. However, with all these
pre-conceived notions behind, Ilo Ilo did well, and Singaporeans loved it, the
grand premiere back in town was well received and it performed rather well in
the local box office, slightly over $500,000 till date (from box office mojo)
I
really enjoy how Ilo Ilo has been shot, credits goes to cinematographer Benoit
Soler for pulling off the one-takes in most scenes of the film. Bigger credit
goes to director Anthony Chen to be able to set the talent into the mood for
the scene, long takes are not easy, dialogues and performances are all crucial,
a slight mis-cue and a loss in attention span will result in a wasted take.
Cinematographer Benoit Soler |
The use of
the handheld one takes might at first look jittery to some, as most audiences
are used to well crafted blockbuster hits, amazingly choreographed shots on the
dolly, crane, green screen, what not. It is the "ultimate cinema
experience" complete with a star studded cast and great sound design, Ilo
Ilo has none of it. Instead, Ilo Ilo gets intimate with the audiences, with the
camera pointed right at the action, holding pauses when there's drama between
the characters to allow the audience to feel the uneasiness of watching
something unfold.
The natural performances from the lead characters take credit
in allowing Ilo Ilo to be told so beautifully from camera, being able to hold an emotional scene for an
extended duration, without the cuts and different lens coverage is challenging.
The blocking of the scene to determine where the character stands also exemplify
Chen's intention in the shifting of power of authority between the maid Teresa
and Jia Ler in some scenes. In all, it is a 3rd person viewing the life of a
family, the voyeuristic perspective the lens offer gives the innate nature of
an individual taking a peek into a stranger's life. The sense of awkwardness
when one gets during a sequence without a cut keeps the attention going, and the
thoughts from the audience, "when is this going to end, I am feeling a bit
uneasy watching this" puts the story through the paces, allowing them to
accept it truthfully to the director's intention.
There are
many local elements in the film, some subtly implanted, some albeit more tongue
in cheek. The constant 4D element in the film is pretty funny, like how Mum
takes the numbers off from Terry's passport in hopes to strike lottery, for the
"Singapore dream for the quick buck" through 4D or Toto, especially
during the Asian Financial Crisis, where any additional income might come in
handy for the rainy days. How Jia Ler lures his disclipine master with his
detailed analysis of how "0238" will be the winning number is also
very interesting, showcasing a different side of teachers, they are human too.
The winning 4D scene in my opinion that really made Ilo Ilo a true local film
is where Jia Ler was patiently waiting for 7pm to the very second where he
rushed off from the dinner table to wait for the reporting of the winning 4D
numbers from the radio. It can relate closely to the audience, which is what
makes the elements work.
The
introduction of the success-career speeches is also very apt, as we see
tricksters making use of the loom of the poor economic period to play mind
games and psychological challenges into tricking them into paying for a bogus
course.
Ilo Ilo is
a periodic film of Singapore set in the 1990s, the subtle acting, wonderful
production design and brilliant cinematography makes it a benchmark in
Singapore cinema for years to come.
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