Hegel's Angel Explained

Hegel's Angel
Native Name:Zanj Hegel la
Director:Simone Rapisarda Casanova
Starring:Pierre Widley Phadaël, Mentor Rood, Eddy Fleursaint, Gala Calisto, Philippe Petit, Ebby Angel Louis.
Runtime:70 minutes
Country:Canada / Haiti / Italy / United States

Hegel's Angel (Haitian; Haitian Creole: '''Zanj Hegel la''') is a 2018 experimental film directed by Simone Rapisarda Casanova.

Plot summary

Inspired by Vodou and Kanaval cosmologies, and co-written with the entire cast and crew, Hegel's Angel is an experimental ethnofiction that challenges the boundaries between film genres. The film, set in Haiti, follows an inquisitive boy named Widley whose life unfolds away from the turmoil of an upcoming presidential election. The boy plays football, goes swimming, works with his father on odd jobs, and visits a local editor who is putting together a film within the film while lamenting the director’s disappearance. Throughout, Widley witnesses the struggle of his people under what has been dubbed “the charitable-industrial complex”, and the transition from one foreign domination to another.[1]

Production

Hegel's Angel is the third feature film by Simone Rapisarda Casanova. It is the result of the experience the artist had in 2013 and 2014 while living and working as a film teacher in Jacmel, Haiti. As in his previous works, the artist’s stylistic hallmarks include his elliptical, metacinematic approach to storytelling, his unconventional collaboration with non-actors, his use of natural light and colour inspired by renaissance paintings,[2] along with meticulously-composed single-takes and diegetic soundscapes.[3] His approach to filmmaking is mostly process-driven, after careful research of the thematic base.[4] Unlike Rapisarda's previous works, where he adopted a "one-man-crew" approach, Hegel's Angel is the result of his tight collaboration with a small crew composed by former students and their relatives and friends. Rapisarda’s commitment to collaboration, or “shared ethnography”, as inspired by filmmaker and anthropologist Jean Rouch,[5] infuses his work and results in all participants being credited as co-writers of the film.[5] The intent behind the artist's stylistic and methodological choices is to create a cinematic occasion where people and places may reveal their deepest nature.[6]

Theoretical aspects

In this as in previous films, the author questions the ethics of ethnographic filmmaking, and especially of Western ethnographic filmmaking documenting life in developing nations.[7] He strives to make the spectator aware of cinematic artificiality by means of a reflexive style that repeatedly and in various ways exposes the directorial performance. This choice also provides him with a tool to explore the boundaries of the cinematic medium. Since this approach doesn't clear the ethical issues, Rapisarda adopts a wide range of actions, inside and outside the filmmaking process, to balance what he considers the implicit exploitative character of the medium. The film attempts to give of Haiti, a country traditionally under-documented in cinema,[8] an image that finally embodies a plurality of cosmological views. The title blends together ideas drawn from the work of Walter Benjamin "Theses on the Philosophy of History" and Susan Buck-Morss argument on Hegel's theorization of the master-slave dialectic following the Haitian revolution of 1791.[9]

Release and critical response

Awards

2019

2018

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Zanj Hegel la, Hegel's'Angel . Talentpress . 9 February 2020 .
  2. Web site: Discovering the Spiritus Loci: Simone Rapisarda Casanova on The Creation of Meaning . Filmmaker Magazine . 25 August 2015 . 15 May 2016 .
  3. Web site: Pacifico's Heights: Simone Rapisarda Casanova on The Creation of Meaning . Cinemascope . 16 September 2014 . 15 May 2016 .
  4. Web site: La creazione di significato . it . Mediterraneaonline.eu . 2 February 2015 . 15 May 2016 .
  5. Web site: Spirit of Place. A few notes on ethnography, cinema and 3 films by Simone Rapisarda and co- creators. . Dara Culhane . Centre for Imaginative Ethnography (CIE) . January 2019 . 9 February 2020 . 13 August 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200813052806/https://imaginative-ethnography.com/2019/01/15/spirit-of-place/ . dead .
  6. Web site: A tree that's no longer there: An interview with filmmaker Simone Rapisarda Casanova . Austin Vida . 2012 . 25 May 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160603231919/http://www.austinvida.com/entertainment/2012/interview-filmmaker-simone-rapisarda-casanova/ . 3 June 2016 .
  7. Web site: Zanj Hegal La: Colonialism, Filmmaking and Attempts at Accountability. . Paige Smith . SADMag . January 2019 . 8 March 2020 .
  8. Web site: Hegel's Angel at the Collected Voices Film Festival . https://web.archive.org/web/20200218103049/https://whitecitycinema.com/2019/10/17/hegels-angel-at-the-collected-voices-film-festival/ . dead . 2020-02-18 . Michael Glover Smith . White City Cinema . October 2019 . 8 March 2020 .
  9. Dickinson . Peter . 2019 . Review Essay: The Films of Simone Rapisarda Casanova . Anthropologica . 61 . 2 . 354–358 . 10.3138/anth.2019-0022 . 212943996 . 8 March 2020.
  10. Web site: Winners 2019 . Collected Voices Film Festival, official website . 2019 . 9 February 2020 .
  11. Web site: Indigenous Africans Winners and Official Selection . QUIFF, official website . 2018 . 25 May 2015 .
  12. Web site: 2019 Winners/Recap . Etowah Film Festival, official website . 2019 . 9 February 2020 .
  13. Web site: Outstanding Achievement Award . DIFF, official website . 2019 . 9 February 2020 .
  14. Web site: Best Feature Film Platinum Award . MFF Albuquerque, official website . July 2019 . 9 February 2020 .