What that gives rise to is a minor miracle of nuanced, layered screenwriting. Every other line here folds back onto itself, thickens with meaning and suggestion. Even when talking about buttons and grommets, these coworkers seem to be talking about themselves, and what catches their eye; much goes unspoken, but somehow a lot is conveyed. Somewhere in the background, Touzani seeds an idea about the accelerated pace of modern life - so much work, so little time - and how it limits our means of recovery. (It feels an especially resonant film to encounter as we disentangle ourselves from Covid and enter the brave new world of our tech-bro profiteers.) By contrast, The Blue Caftan stands resolute as a slow burn, an exemplar of judicious, measured craft. The small space of the shop forces the actors together, as it does customers and staff; the result is an astonishingly tactile film, full of expressive framing and gestures. You'll remember the close-ups of hands, picking fruit, smoothing down, reaching out. You'll remember the Vermeer-like still lives this camera captures in passing, the quality of light in the workshop and the couple's home. Most of all, you'll remember these actors: the yearning, smouldering Azabal, whose Mina only ever seems one smile away from a happier life; the upright, noble, Firth-ish Bakri, whose Halim knows the trouble he's causing Mina and loves her anyway; the no less sensitive Missioui, unaware of the behind-the-shutters turmoil he's caused, determined not to be anybody's plaything. It's rare to encounter a drama whose characters are so determined to do the right thing by others, even if it means denying and hurting themselves. Touzani doesn't want these innately good people to fall out of one another's good graces. We don't, either. But sometimes time passes; sometimes things change.
The Blue Caftan is available on DVD through New Wave Films, and to rent via Prime Video, Curzon Home Cinema, the BFI Player and YouTube.
No comments:
Post a Comment