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urban solutions

Far from the chaos of the jungle, behind the automatic entrance gates of the impeccable bourgeois houses that pass by, two voices reach us: that of an artist visiting Brazil in colonial times and that of a present-day security guard. One explores the country ruled by violent imperialism, the other, from behind the bars, speaks of the absurdity of his concierge job. He stays put all day long, eyes glued to the screen of the security cameras installed in the luxury residences, until he’s exhausted. The two testimonies intermingle and echo each other so well that we never know which is from yesterday and which from today, so similar and oft-repeated are the systems and representations. Slavery is so well-suited to modernity that it seems we see a colonial representation through the building’s security cameras. The friction explored by the four filmmakers links colonial practices to contemporary ones. Here, men are paid to guard against any upheavals, ensure that everything stays in its place. To some extent, the order of things is maintained by the inhabitants of these luxury residences. And the guard sees to it that his condition remains what it is. The tone remains playful, alert and mischievous and the film leans more towards a luminous invitation rather than a solemn lament. By associating the archives of past and present uprisings, it incites the static pictures of colonial imagery to come back to life and turn against enslavement and the fascistic tendencies bordering the imposing entrance gates.
Clémence Arrivé



Mehr Informationen: http://www.cinemadureel.org/en/films/urban-solutions/



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