Citizens use cinema to reclaim their life, culture and civilisation
What happens when cinema leaps off the screen and becomes a part of life itself? All over the world, cinema has been used as an active instrument of defiance, of refuge from war, of peace and friendship without borders—born of an insistent belief in a sane, cultured and civilised world, beyond guns and bombs. There are numerous instances of cinema as a raised middle finger, including the Sarajevo Film Festival born in the midst of the Bosnian war; the Krok International Animated Film Festival jointly held by intermittently warring Russia and Ukraine; and the ImagineAsia festival, held by the British Film Institute, which used film to address racial violence in the UK.
The Sarajevo Film Festival was born in 1993, amid snipers and artillery fire, during the four-year siege of Sarajevo by Bosnian Serbian troops. Sick of cowering in homes and bunkers in paranoia for months, a few friends decided to put their lives on the line to watch and discuss films together. And a film festival was born. On attending it, I realised the festival was a powerful act of defiance, with citizens using cinema to reclaim their life, culture and civilisation. Mirsad Purivatra, festival director and co-founder, calls its origins “war cinema”.
“Why are you holding a film festival in the middle of a war?” a reporter asked Haris Pasovic, director of the first edition of the film festival. “Why are they holding a war in the middle of a film festival?” he retorted. In his article, titled ‘Made in War: The Sarajevo Film Festival’, on the European Cultural Foundation website, scholar Mirza Redzic offers inspiring insights into the birth of the festival. There was hardly any electricity, heating, running water or food rations. A small theatre stage in the Dramatic Arts Academy was transformed into a ‘cinema’ through a VHS player and projector. The festival ran on the sheer willpower of the organisers, audiences and generators: Thirty-seven movies were screened for 15,000 besieged residents. Their absolute audacity drew worldwide support. Directors Francis Ford Coppola, Wim Wenders and Krzysztof Kieslowski shared their films, while Alfonso Cuaron and Leos Carax turned up for Q&As. Photographer Annie Leibovitz designed the festival poster and Susan Sontag brought the posters, printed in New York, via a UN airlift. Journalists with UN press cards brought VHS tapes of films for the screenings.
As the Bosnian currency collapsed, Redzick reveals, the price of a ticket was seven cigarettes. But for the people of Sarajevo, the festival was a source of great optimism. The screenings were full, with audiences risking their lives just to see a film. Over 10,000 people were killed in the war, and over 50,000 wounded, including civilians. Yet, so fiercely determined were Sarajevo’s artistes to fight for their art that, along with the film festival, an estimated 182 plays, 170 exhibits and 48 concerts were staged during the siege.
(This story appears in the Sept-Oct 2015 issue of ForbesLife India. To visit our Archives, click here.)