

Zurich
Saturday, 26. April 2014
Sunday, 27. April 2014
Wednesday, 30. April 2014
Thursday, 1. May 2014
Oliver Sechting, Max Taubert · D 2014 · D/E/d · 88 min

Kitty Green · AUS 2013 · Rus/e/d · 78 min
D/E · 45 min
Oliver Demont · D · 30 min
Evgeniy Nevskiy · RUS 2014 · Rus/e · 110 min
Friday, 2. May 2014
D/E · 45 min
Saturday, 3. May 2014
Abdellah Taïa · F/MAR/CH 2013 · Arab/F/d · 84 min




Feature film
In a perfect world, film festivals would be filled with debut films as disciplined and poetic as Salvation Army, a film that first-time director Taïa adapted from his own autobiographical novel. This fact alone should be cause for consideration: How many filmmakers wallow in the self-indulgent excesses of autobiography? So few are capable of accomplishing what Taïa does here, which is to regard his own story with relative objectivity. His young on-screen surrogate (Said Mrini), first seen growing up in a large family in Morocco, is shown negotiating various structures which are supra-individual and which exist neither to victimize him nor to inculcate him into adulthood. He sneaks away from his troubled clan to hide in abandoned buildings and have sex with random men, his lack of affect alerting us to Abdellah’s recognition that desire operates within an economy, emotional engagement being only a secondary concern (at best). When the film skips ahead to the adult Abdellah (Karim Ait M’hand) and his relationship with a Swiss professor, we can witness the impact of these early lessons of gender and ethnic inequality on the grown man, as he attempts to transition from opportunist to stable citizen in a society that still views him with suspicion. Salvation Army avoids the usual pitfalls of political cinema, precisely because Taïa is able to remain focused on particulars, the overwhelming feel of things. (Agnès Godard’s cinematography certainly helps in this regard.) But at the same time, Taïa makes sure that we see those specifics as nodes within objective historical formations, in which there are no enemies or smug tellers of truth, only people trying to make their best available move. (TIFF)
Ilppo Pohjola · FIN 1991 · Finn/E/e · 55 min

D/E
Mike Lerner, Maxim Pozdorovkin · GB 2013 · Russ/e/d · 88 min
Sunday, 4. May 2014
Mike Lerner, Maxim Pozdorovkin · GB 2013 · Russ/e/d · 88 min
Beth Nelson, Ana Grillo · USA 2013 · E/d · 62 min


Monday, 5. May 2014
Tuesday, 6. May 2014
Wednesday, 7. May 2014
Pratibha Parmar · GB 1993 · E/d · 54 min
E · 45 min
Thursday, 8. May 2014
Beth Nelson, Ana Grillo · USA 2013 · E/d · 62 min

