Financial Times Europe - 12.09.2019

(ff) #1
6 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES Thursday12 September 2019

ARTS


Katie Gavin
and Josette
Maskin at
Village
Underground
—Marilyn Kingwill

Ludovic Hunter-Tilney

Singer Katie Gavin was moved to tears at
Los Angeles trio Muna’s show, the first
of two in London. They were prompted
by sustained cheering from the audi-
ence after the song “I Know a Place”, the
band’s 2016 anthem about creating safe
spaces for LGBTQ+ people.
Gavin and her bandmates, guitarists
Josette Maskin and Naomi McPherson,
describe themselves as queer-
identifying. Once that might have trans-
lated into transgressive or noisy music,
a challenge to norms. Indeed, Gavin ini-
tially wanted to start a riot grrrl band
when Muna formed in 2013. But the
three musicians have ended up in a
more mainstream place, a musical safe
space drawn from 1980s pop, soft-rock
and electropop that treats any sexuality
as a person’s norm.
They are touring their new album
Saves the World. The title is semi-ironic,
Gavin explained from the Village
Underground stage. Her autobiographi-
cal lyrics are about anxieties and vul-
nerabilities, not manifestos for saving
the world. But the personal, in her view,
is political. The first step towards
making everything else better is by

being, she went on to say, “the best ver-
sion of yourself, the writer of your life”.
The self-help lingo underscored the
essential (and characteristically Ameri-
can) optimism at the core of Muna’s
tales of self-harming thoughts and
destructive relationships. Songs were
dominated by big colourful choruses, an
upbeat response to whatever tumultu-
ous circumstances were being described
by Gavin in the verses. Meanwhile,
Maskin and McPherson’s jangly,
nuanced guitars were edgy only in the
sense that they occasionally echoed U2’s
The Edge.
“Navy Blue” palliated a break-up with
feathery Fleetwood Mac riffs. “Crying on
the Bathroom Floor” conducted its exca-
vation of emotional masochism amid

shimmering electro-pop. At times too
smooth on record — as though being the
best version of yourself did not require
serious conflict or unknotting — it was
given added force on stage, where a
drummer and bass player joined the trio.
Empowerment anthem “Number
One Fan” was more forthright. The
sharper side of Gavin’s lyrics, such as the
cycles of abusive behaviour described in
“Taken”, came into stronger focus. “It’s
Gonna Be Okay, Baby” ended the set in a
warm chug of guitars and Gavin’s assur-
ances to her younger self that all will be
fine when she gets older. No matter how
many tears are shed along the way,
Muna’s songs insist on happy endings.

whereismuna.com

Upbeat songs born of pain and tears


P O P

Muna
Village Underground, London
aaaee

T


here’ll always be an Eng-
land while there are screens
showing pipe-dreamt pic-
tures of its past.Downton
Abbey, on large screen as
on small, is an elegiac delirium about an
age of consenting feudalism. Is there,
can there be, was there ever such an age?
Masters upstairs; servants down-
stairs; ancestries fathoms deep. In Julian
Fellowes’s screenplay, as in his televi-
sion scripts, nothing has changed in four
centuries since Elizabeth I; with the
accessorising hope that nothing will
really change up to and including Eliza-
beth II. (The Crown, the Anglophilic
screen’s other modern superhit, says
exactly that.)
“Bigging up” a TV series to make a
movie usually means taking its charac-
ters around the world: Venice, Hong
Kong, Rio. SinceDownton Abbey’s main
character is Downton Abbey, the moun-
tains must visit Muhammad. Cue King
George V and Queen Mary bestowing a
royal visit. Cue fanfares of full-orchestral
music, with composer John Lunn swig-
ging the Château Elgar. Cue scatter-
brainedbons motsfrom Maggie Smith,
hostly anguish from Lord Hugh Bonnev-
ille and Lady Liz McGovern, and excited
bibble-babble from the servants.
Not a Marxist in sight below stairs. As
if to make up for that, Fellowes bungs in
a republican would-be assassin — a man
hoping the film’s Anglo-Irish romantic
lead (Allen Leech as a Downton scion-
by-marriage) will help him commit reg-
icide. The murder plot quickens our
pulse. But history has told us the out-
come. Soon it’s back to the comfort-
blanket crises. What to serve for din-
dins? Who’s pinching the teaspoons? Is
there honey still for tea?
It’s quite daring in the circs to have a
brief gay subplot, late on, in which a
servant visits an illegal AC/DC dance-

and-drink joint. Consenting feudalism
was fine, except for those who wouldn’t
or couldn’t accept its oppressive small
print. In the New Elizabethan age — God
bless our Queen — the small print’s iniq-
uities have been made bigger, plainer
and more scrutable. Now we all can find
them, read them and, if disposed, defy
or nullify them. Timedo hange. Isn’tc
unchanging history a nightmare more
than a dream?
We are not just in the eye of war’s
storm in the documentaryFor Sama.
We are in the ears, nose, throat and
pores. We are in the heart and brain. We
are everywhere: not least in the soul of
Waad al-Kateab, the mother and film-
maker whose daughter and dedicatee is
named in the title.
The Syrian war has gone on so long it
has produced something worse than
compassion fatigue. Passion fatigue.

Not just our pity for the victims but our
keenly felt rage at the oppressors and
their allies (condemnation of the Rus-
sians being a main motif here) has
started to be crushed by the tanks
of longevity.
This harrowing film restores our
responsiveness. Al-Kateab films every-
thing: from the quiet, day-to-day
domestic anxieties of a mum with a
child and married lover — a multitask-
ing doctor/activist in ravaged Aleppo,
who later becomes her husband — to the
chaos and carnage, day-to-day also, of
shelled streets, houses, hospitals...
The diary-form movie takes us from
2011 to 2016. The director, a business
degree student turned self-appointed
war journalist, makes no pretence of
invisibility. Her camera is a cranky,
often demonised presence: “Are you
filming? Film this!” screams a mother
holding a freshly slain child. So is al-
Kateab herself. An artist painted into
her own “Guernica”, she is omnipresent.
But she can also erase herself in order to
foreground horrors and tragedies she
wants to save from oblivion.
Two young brothers sob over a
slaughtered third, brought to the hospi-
tal in that ghostly, recurring procession
we come to know of survivors and slain:
white-caked figures — dust, dust and

more dust — performing somePagliacci
from Purgatory. One hospital crumbles
after another. Tyres are burnt in streets
so that through the smoke “the Russians
can’t see where to bomb.” Rivers are
fished for corpses.
Finally come the ceasefire and exo-
dus. Yet in minutes “They’re shooting at
the ambulances. We have to go back!” It
hardly bears thinking about. But that’s
the siren cry of response fatigue.For
Sama nsures wee will o on thinkingg
about it; and feeling it; and in some
ghostly, ghastly way living it.
Hustlers s based on a true story, buti
it’s hard to believe a moment of it. The
arc of the tale may be true. The minute-
by-minute screen spectacle is another
matter. What real person looks like
Jennifer Lopez, starrily OTT as a pole-/
lap-dancer traversing the years from
America’s turn-of-millennium yuppie
heyday — so good for business — to the
2008 meltdown. Lopez is a phenome-
non. Without clothes she is Miss Carnal
Amplitude; with clothes she is an
engulfing mass of swishing fur.
In the post-Lehman months and
years, she and her more toned-down fel-
low dancer Constance Wu go crooked to
beat the system. No more twirling and
writhing in X-rated clubs. They “fish”
their clients from the richer reaches of

Civvy Stream and use drug cocktails to
stun them into credit-card compliance.
The ketamine-plus formula, explains
someone, “erases your memory, then
makes you happy.”
Can you take it to watch this movie? In
a vain bid to outclassShowgirls, there are
cataracts of classical music. We get
through most of Chopin’sÉtudes. Direc-
tor Lorene Scafaria evidently thought
that low-grade sex and crime could be
done as high-classSturm und Drang. It
can’t. Unless you’re Martin Scorsese in a
purple streak.
Fancy a northern Macedonian film
about beekeeping? “You will, Oscar, you
will,” I am tempted to say. The Academy
Award for Best Foreign Language Film,
honouringHoneyland, would notch a
new record for embracing brave esoter-
ica. The “heroine” of Ljubomir Stefanov
and Tamara Kotevska’s semi-drama-
tised documentary is fiftyish Hatidze, a
mountain-dweller, apiarist and single
daughter to a dying, half-blind mum.
Skinny and arch-backed, Hatidze has
a bulbous hooked nose and terrible
teeth (too much honey?). But, yes, she is
beautiful. Crazed devotionalism keeps
gleaming from her eyes. She adores her
mother. She adores her bees, whose nec-
tar factories buzz away inside every-
thing from rock crevices to tree stumps.
Heedless of hurt, she wears scant pro-
tection and thrives and survives. In con-
trast a terrain-invading gypsy family gets
stung horrifically when it cack-handedly
tries its own bee-keeping. That brings
ruin, temporarily we hope, to Hatidze. “I
have no bees! They killed all my bees.”
Mum: “May God burn their livers!”
The film has a lunatic fixity of gaze.
There are gorgeous, spectacular land-
scapes quaking with wind, susurrant
with life or honeyed (yes) with after-
noon light. Even lives of barbarous
hardship have their beauties. Which
doesn’t mean this movie stints on those
lives’ cruel exactions; nor on the bleak
assaults of bereavement for a lonely
woman counting her companionships.

Upstairs, downstairs and in my lady’s cinema


Left: from left,
Lesley Nicol,
Sophie McSher,
Jim Carter and
Phyllis Logan in
‘Downton Abbey’.
Below: Waad and
Sama al-Kateab in
‘For Sama’. Below
left: Jennifer Lopez
and Constance Wu
in ‘Hustlers’

FILM


Nigel


Andrews


Downton Abbey
Michael Engler
AAAEE

For Sama
Waad al-Kateab, Edward Watts
AAAAA

Hustlers
Lorene Scafaria
AAEEE

Honeyland
Tamara Kotevska, Ljubomir Stefanov
AAAAE
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