"Future My Love" (The Guardian 15/11/13)
Future My Love (12A) 97 mins ***
This distinctive, Chris
Marker-like essay sees Swedish-born, Glasgow-based filmmaker Maja Borg finding
a novel means of getting over heartbreak: checking herself in at the Edenic
Florida retreat of social theorist Jacque Fresco, an early proponent of free
culture whose most radical idea is that we should abandon money altogether –
doing everything for love, not financial reward. Theories that almost certainly
sounded naïve pre-2008 are returned to the table: Borg’s conversations with
Floridians point up how the present system doesn’t work for them, while
archival digressions contrast capitalism’s 1950s golden age with the scrapheaps
piling up in its wake. If there’s something self-conscious about the framing –
where the director’s often mopey internal monologues threaten to overwrite
Fresco’s fleet thinking – the core is provocative and outward-looking: in
searching for solutions, both for her own unhappiness and everybody else’s,
Borg transforms the personal into the unmistakably political.
Future My Love opens in selected cinemas from today.
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