Urgent narrative.
by Yates, Steven
Afterimage • March-April, 2008 • 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS (4 LUNI, 3 SAPTAMINI SI 2 ZILE)
BY CRISTIAN MUNGIU
113 MINUTES, 2007
International film festivals in 2007 saw some surprising successes,
most notably the Romanian film 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (4 Luni, 3
Saptamini si 2 Zile, 2007) by Cristian Mungiu. The film, set in the
Ceausescu period and detailing the events surrounding an illegal
abortion, certainly benefits from the momentum and confidence created by
the recent Romanian wave of reflective films that exhibit some of the
most exhilarating and challenging contemporary cinema anywhere in the
world. The most noteworthy have been Cristi Puiu's Un Certain
Regard winner The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (2005) and Corneliu
Porumboiu's Camera d'Or winner 12:08 East of Bucharest (2006).
Though the premise of the film may not initially seem captivating, 4
Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days won the Palme d'Or in Cannes and it is
worthwhile examining its success.
In 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, set in 1987, two students, Otilia
and Gabita share a room in a university dormitory in a nameless Romanian
town. Otilia books a cheap hotel room for three nights to meet a
mysterious man called Mr. Bebe. Gabita is pregnant and abortion being
illegal, a clandestine set of events takes place over the course of
several days. The film does not properly explain why Gabita has reached
such a late stage of pregnancy before pursuing an abortion, but aside
from the likely financial reasons, this withholding of information in a
poignant situation creates the tension and urgency that make a
compelling story. Facing big risks with few resources, Otilia is forced
to negotiate the state-imposed criminality of the abortion.
Using her savings and money from her boyfriend, Otilia raises the
money to pay for the weekend in the hotel and the abortion. Despite
Gabita's precarious situation, it is the limits imposed on
Otilia's movements that align the viewer with her throughout the
film. This ordinary young woman caught up in an intense situation
invites notions of how we would behave in such circumstances. Otilia has
to balance her complicity with and resentment toward Mr. Bebe, who is
crucial in performing the abortion. Though Bebe is portrayed as the
antagonist of the film, his survival as a family man in an oppressive
state explains a callous instinct that Gabita and Otilia may understand
later, making it difficult to pass moral judgment.
The interior scenes at the hotel, with the static camera and the
silent desperation of the characters, particularly Otilia, create a
feeling that something dramatic is impending. The camera opens the space
but then somehow conceals it, making the framing oscillatory,
gravitational, and claustrophobic--a positioning that is fundamental to
the film's structure. The characters' maneuvers into screen
space are seemingly magnetic so when they move off screen they are soon
pulled back into the frame again. As a result the controversial scenes
in the film, particularly toward the end, are not considered so
grotesque in their explicitness, because the film refutes any moral
doctrine that may have been precipitated from the outset.
Mungiu only shoots on location, which created certain challenges in
replicating the time period. Mungiu stated in a press release, "In
the late eighties there was no light on the streets ... and a very bleak
and gray atmosphere overall. This explains the grading of the
film." Cultural references to this Romanian era also help to set
the period, particularly the presence of Kent cigarettes and Tic Tacs,
which were in high demand at the time.
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4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days is an ambivalent film because it is
difficult, yet highly compelling. Perhaps due to the urgency of the
story, Mungiu does not stop to think about questioning the morality of
the characters. The film is so self-contained that it does not even seem
to need an audience, but that makes its world all the more complete and
fascinating. It is an authentic snapshot of a period and a depressingly
real scenario with which the audience cannot help being engaged, albeit
from a safe distance.
STEVEN YATES writes widely on film and is an English language
supervisor for the FIPRESCI Web site. He recently sat on their
critics' jury at the Motovun and Pecs film festivals.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Visual Studies
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.