IFFBoston 2017 Celebrates the Best of Cinema That Stays With You

“It Stays With You,” reads the daily planner for this year’s Independent Film Festival Boston. It’s an easy enough slogan to decipher at a glance: IFFBoston is all about great movies, and great movies have a way of lingering in your brain space the way the best barbecue has a way of sticking to your ribs. But in the weeks leading up to the festival’s opening night last month, April 26th, I must confess my wonder at its substance as a unifying theme for an eight-day bonanza of cinema. The movies do indeed stay with us, but that’s the baseline expectation. If they didn’t, we’d have very little reason to watch them.
It took me until Saturday’s screening of Jeremy S. Levine and Landon Van Soest’s documentary For Ahkeem to really appreciate the importance and value of IFFBoston’s 2017 motif. When you spend a week and a day of your life ensconced in the spongy embrace of a movie theater seat, watching images glide indifferently across the screen for several hours at a time, you start to forget why the movies matter. Such are the consequences of mainlining a drug as powerful as feature filmmaking. But let’s pull the scope back a bit. Even a regular moviegoing habit can increasingly numb us to the essentials of the medium. We don’t watch movies because we like making our eyes bleed. We watch movies because they say something about us, because they change us and because they transport us into the lives of others in ways no other art form can.
For Ahkeem felt like a disciplinary slap to the mug at IFFBoston’s halfway point. It forced me to reevaluate all the films I’d seen leading up to its screening, and led me to watch every subsequent film on my “to see” list from a refreshed perspective. You could describe Levine and Van Soest as flies on the wall in their subject’s life, but be warned that they’ll roundly reject the characterization. In For Ahkeem, they represent a presence in young Daje Shelton’s life instead of a force, much less active participants. They do not intervene. They do not speak up. They do what documentary films are best at doing: They observe, witness, and record. (There’s a possibility that the pair finagled a small portion of their footage to suit the needs of the production, but if so, it’s scarcely noticeable.) All of their focus is placed on the shoulders of Daje, nicknamed Boonie, a teen growing up in an unforgiving part of St. Louis best qualified by bullet wounds, as in one early scene where she and her friends reminisce over the gunshot scars on their bodies almost as casually as if they were gossiping about boys.
The film is set during the days leading up to the officer-involved slaying of Michael Brown, and in the period of nationwide outrage following the exoneration of Darren Wilson. Daje’s life is the definition of struggle, at home, in the classroom, and everywhere in between. She breaks school rules, which gets her in trouble with her teachers, which gets her in trouble with her mother. This is just one cycle among many that shape her existence, the greatest of them being the school-to-prison pipeline that sees an astronomical percentage of black students in Missouri booted from one system and inevitably entangled in the other. (Not her, for what it’s worth, but others around her, her friends, her family, and Antonio, the eventual father of her firstborn child, who we see dragged down that aqueduct and into the courts as Daje sits helplessly on the sidelines.) It’s vicious. For Ahkeem, however, is not itself a vicious film. It isn’t judgmental, either, just incredibly moving and faithful to its material. Levine and Van Soest clearly see the urgency and sad modernity of Daje’s story, but they don’t abuse their privilege as her storytellers just to get a response from their audience. Instead, they appeal to us by maintaining tight proximity to Daje and letting her be.
For Ahkeem embeds itself in our consciousness through simplicity: The work is matter of fact and frank, an expression of blunt truths that we may wish to ignore, but which it forces us to acknowledge via the business end of a camera. It’s a confrontational movie, as so many movies in IFFBoston ‘17’s line-up happen to be. Take Menashe, for instance. Joshua Z. Weinstein’s stunningly unpolished vérité debut is a picture set within the insular and rigid bounds of Borough Park, the center Brooklyn’s Hasidic community, in which the title character fights to gain custody of his son from his brother-in-law, following the death of his wife. And then there’s Stumped, Robin Berghaus’ documentary portrait of Will Lautzenheiser, a quadruple amputee who turns to comedy as a tool for coping with and working through his hardships. And while we’re at it, I should mention Lemon, the saga of an awkward white dude aching for love and validation, who literally and repeatedly soils himself in his Herculean but doomed efforts at self-improvement. These are films on a mission. They have a distinct purpose. They have goals. They have messages.
You could say the same about any movie made under any circumstance, of course, but IFFBoston’s movies suggest higher imperatives. Weinstein invested several years of his life trying to make Menashe, missing out on locations, losing actors, and juggling all manner of delays throughout the film’s production; another filmmaker might have given up, washed their hands of the project, moved on to the next thing. But Weinstein had a story to tell, and by gum, he was gonna tell it. You might call him determined, but you could also call him stubborn, which dovetails nicely with the persona of his protagonist, Menashe (Menashe Lustig), the black sheep of his neighborhood—an Orthodox Jew who refuses to wear a coat or a hat, and who routinely ducks the dictates of his rabbi and the mores of his culture so as to stay close with his child. He isn’t a rebel, per se, but there is something innately rebellious in his behavior, which sees him on the receiving end of frequent scoldings. Nor is the film itself a work of rebellion, though it is a work of critique, layered with humanity.
Those layers pay off in its final bittersweet shot, the inverse of its opening shot: Menashe saunters through a crowded street, immediately distinguished from all others around him by dint of his garb (or lack thereof). How you read the ending image depends on your vantage point, but whether you see Menashe’s ultimate transformation as an act of sacrifice or conformity, the film itself remains an act of naked examination. It makes no moves to disguise its intentions. We can draw lines between it and Stumped, too, which trades examination for candor. Cinema should be so lucky to see a film as upfront and accessible as Stumped, where the star lets it all hang out in every way possible; we see Lautzenheiser shower, we watch him eat (meaning, we watch his partner, Angel Gonzalez, a jovial man who effortlessly lives up to his first name, feed Will pizza), we look on as he fights like hell through his physical therapy sessions, all the better to appreciate what we in the audience take for granted thanks to our limbs.
Stumped
The images Berghaus captures through her lens are images we can’t erase from our minds. It isn’t so much that Stumped is inspiring, per se, as much as it is humbling. Rather than fetishize Will’s situation and exploit him for creative gain, the film puts us in his shoes (pardon) as much as it possibly can, fuses our perspectives with his own, so when he jokes about the worst thing about losing your arms, the anxiety we feel just watching him on the screen dissipates. (The worst thing, by the way, is that you can’t masturbate without someone giving you a hand, though really, that makes it the best thing. Ba dum, psh.)
What persists once all negative feelings fade away is Will: His spirit, his indomitable heart, his sheer, well, willpower. (Sorry.) That might be the very best representation of IFFBoston’s mantra out of the entire line-up, though if you want a movie to stay with your patrons, it helps when the star makes themselves available. (If you were at the festival, you no doubt saw Lautzenheiser out and about, not just at Stumped’s Q&A, but in theaters, watching movies, just minding his own business and enjoying all the pleasures the fest has to offer.) It also helps when you show movies that elicit strong reactions, which brings us back to Lemon, which would win the “Most Polarizing Feature” award if such an award existed. Prior to IFFBoston, Janicza Bravo’s film showed at Sundance, International Film Festival Rotterdam, and South by Southwest. And from those three festivals alone, it’s already gained a divisive reputation. Let me delight you by calling it one of the year’s most vital films to date, then caution you by describing it as the type of film only a Rick Alverson fan (or a John Magary fan, or a Coen brothers fan) could love. If you like your character studies sung in the key of misanthropy, Bravo’s feature debut will be your jam. If not, well, you’ll dig its level of craftsmanship.
Bravo works overtime making every scene in Lemon’s 85-minute running time as unpleasant as possible, daubing the woes of her manchild antihero, Isaac (Brett Gelman), in hideous brushstrokes: The film is spiteful, petty, jealous, enraged, disdainful, tragic, and nauseating all at once, the tale of a man caught in the tornado of his life’s undoing when his girlfriend (Judy Greer) breaks up with him after a decade of toxic partnership. Bravo’s voice is timely, critiquing white male primacy in 2017 with empathy, sharp wit and combined editing and camera techniques that give Lemon a pleasingly coltish timbre. This is a film that’s as modern as it is urgent. (It’s also the exact kind of movie you want to see at the venerable Brattle Theatre late at night on a Saturday, a repugnant pick-me-up and the perfect counter-programming to standardized indie movie fare on the festival’s docket, a’la the stilted, overly-saccharine The Incredible Jessica James or the nostalgically-bent The Hero.)