Capital Celluloid 2014 - Day 30: Thu Jan 30

Institute Benjamenta (Brothers Quay, 1996): BFI Southbank, NFT2, 8.45pm


This unclassifiable movie is being shown as part of the Buster Keaton season. The movie also screens on January 27th. Details here. (From the BFI introduction: 'Outlandishly beautiful and bizarre, the film is set in a shadowy, sinister, antiquated Middle Europe of the imagination; the Keaton connection is Rylance’s understated, drily funny performance as the watchful innocent who would be a princely saviour.')

Time Out review:
Sometime this century, somewhere in Europe: Jakob von Gunten (Rylance) enrols at the Institute Benjamenta, a run-down edifice headed by an eccentric tyrant (John) and dedicated to the training of suitably unambitious, humble servants. Though Jakob readily submits to the repetitive regime of incredibly banal lessons in servility, he begins to wonder whether he might be sufficiently princely to rescue his melancholy tutor, Benjamenta's sister Lisa (Krige), from the suffocating half-life she leads inside the school's sinister, shadowy walls. Inspired by the writings of Swiss novelist Robert Walser, the first feature from the Brothers Quay is as outlandishly beautiful, bizarre, mysterious and inventive as one might expect; more surprising, perhaps, given their history as animators specialising in puppetry and rather abstract metaphor, is the firm grasp of narrative and the intense performances elicited from a strong international cast. Overall, the film can be seen as a (finally subversive) variation on traditional fairytale motifs, as an allegory on our progress through - as an alternative title would have it - 'This Dream People Call Human Life', or as a loving tribute to cinema's fantastic capacity for poetry. Genuinely unsettling.
Geoff Andrew


Here is an extract.

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