A Dream
for a Requiem

Filmmaker documents pure emotion
REVIEW
WHAT THESE ASHES WANTED
Peter Vesuwalla
Philip
Hoffman's What These Ashes Wanted is one of those films that
forces you to rethink the medium. There are pictures, yes, and movement,
light, and sound. There is, however, no narrative, and yet there is emotion.
Both of these last two points are remarkable.
To make a film that is genuinely non-narrative is no small accomplishment.
At a recent exhibition of short films, I listened as budding visual artist
Victoria Prince attempted to explain that there was no narrative link
among the images in her latest experimental video, despite an audience
member's insistence that he had been told a story. Last year, soi-disant
"guerrilla projectionists" Greg Hanec and Campbell Martin were
forced to concede that people will find a story in their work provided
they look hard enough: audiences tend to do so. The fact is, there is
something hard-wired in the human psyche that forces us to find continuity
where there is none.
What makes What These Ashes Wanted unique and interesting is
Hoffman's ability to override our inherent expectation of being told a
story. We learn that his longtime partner, Marian McMahon, has died of
cancer, and that the film is an expression of his grief, but that's only
what it's about. Nothing actually happens in it, just as nothing in the
physical universe happens to us while we're sitting and reflecting on
the past. It's assembled from nostalgic pieces of video footage, bolex
film, still pictures, words, music, poetry and seemingly random micro-montages
that fade into obscurity like fragmented memories.
"In times of great grief, it was important to go through the motions
of life," he narrates, recalling author Henry James. "Eventually,
they would become real again."
Hoffman edits these motions together the way that Jackson Pollock paints.
He expresses his grief over his lost loved one not through the images
themselves, but through the physical act of filming them. The images such
as an empty room, an inventory of mementoes, and a field of sunflowers,
coupled with a mournful monologue and a montage of unanswered voice-mail
messages, carry all the weight of emotional brush strokes. If Pollock
was an "action painter," then Hoffman, I suppose, ought to be
called an "action filmmaker;" that label, however, might cause
confusion. Instead, call him a documentarian of the human soul.
Philip Hoffman will be on hand to present What These Ashes Wanted,
along with his pupil Jennifer Reeves' We Are Going Home, on Thursday,
May 17, (2001) at 7:30 p.m. at the Cinematheque, 100 Arthur St.
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