CELLULOID DIARY Salsomaggiore 1986
We met Philip Hoffman
at Salsomaggiore Festival. He is a Canadian director,
who at present also teaches cinema, photography and video at Sheridan College
Media Arts Department, Oakville
Ontario. He is a graduate in
Media Studies and is 30 years old. He brings Europe with him as his father is
German and his mother is Polish (but from Czechoslovakia). Hoffman found
himself in the cinematographic art at a young age, not through heritage (he is
the first filmmaker in his family) but through... I don't knowl
Where do artists come from? Hoffman had a photographic
darkroom when he was 14, and, since then, he took pictures and shot
autobiographical movies which later found a place in his diaristic
productions. He has won awards in Canadian and American Festivals and he has
participated at Edinburgh and Rotterdam Festivals.
How has he come to Salsomaggiore Film Festival in Italy? It is because Adriano Apra, Salso's Festival Director,
saw Hoffman's films in Rotterdam and was so
impressed with his work that Apra decided to invite
Hoffman to Italy.
Philip Hoffman arrived
in Salso with five short films, all out of
competition: On the Pond, The Road Ended at the Beach, Somewhere
Between Jalostotitlan and Encarnacion, ?O,ZOO!(The Makinq
of a Fiction Film) and Passing Through (in progress).
Usually the films of
the Canadian Director are inspired by family life or what is happening around
him; they are diaristic films and he works in a
direct and uncomplicated way. "I usually do not use a script in preperation for a film. Scripts can create limits." he
says, "I take pictures and shoot films, mostly during my travels. Each
film comes to light (evolves) slowly, instinctively."
The Road Ended at
the Beach is born of 7 years ('76 - '83) of intermittent
travel through Canada
and was inspired by the author of On the Road, Jack Kerouac. The film
deals with, amongst other things, the filmmaker's delusions and realizations
with respect to living the Kerouac myth.
The film Passing
Through tells the personal story of the director's mother and of her
family. It gathers documents about life i,n
Czechoslovakia
and musical excerpts from recordings of the family collection, everything
composed in 28 minutes. To Greek people it has been a pleasant surprize, because one can hear an excerpt composed by Manos
Hatzidakis, the popular "Never on a
Sunday". Hoffman's uncle plays the piece in the film on accordian.
Hof man's participation at Salsomaggiore Festival has been a sucess.
Journalists requested to show his films again, and during the last day, the
request was accepted by the festival organizers.
What's
Hoffman's opinion of the Festival?
"I'm pleased.
This festival is not a chaotic festival... the atmosphere allows the
possibility to meet people, to talk, to exchange ideas. That is very important
to me."
A.K.S.
Grecia A. Sarigianni