This week sees an unassuming little science-fiction film called The Last Jedi open in cinemas. I’d like to tell you more but the distributors aren’t screening it in time for our deadline. I can’t blame them. I liked the last Star Wars film quite a bit, and this new one looks pretty good too, but, really, they are Death Stars of cinema releases; vast, planet-sized pieces of machinery issuing scorched-earth marketing campaigns from which other distributors shrink in terror.
Still, a few brave films are venturing out this week and in deference to their spirit of intrepid enterprise against the all-conquering behemoth we’re providing a rundown of the assembled competition.
Sounding an affectionate (and given the circumstances, appropriate) tribute to indefatigably independent filmmaking is the French documentary The Prince of Nothingwood. It’s a portrait of Salim Shaheen, a dizzyingly prolific Afghan filmmaker making his 111th feature despite the hardships and threat of violence that blight his homeland. About the quality of his output I remain sceptical, but Shaheen is a force of nature, and a true cinematic maverick, and the documentary is a hoot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvTkI8L4tgQ
Another form of risk-taking is celebrated by Mountain. From the makers of Sherpa, this visually breathtaking documentary features vertigo-inducing shots of climbers scaling various high-altitude summits, accompanied by a soaring orchestral score. Willem Dafoe provides a gravelly voiced rumination of the instinct that compels mountaineers to risk their lives in search of new peaks. From the looks of some of the footage, I wondered if it’s a form of madness?