I grew up without many things, that many that I simply did not know I was doing without. A cimena which normalised a communal audience for sharing intelligent films was one of them. Sometimes, many times, I could have thought that intelligence itself was rationed. But that was then. I now feel like it is some sort of badge of honour to have seen my first Jan Svanmajer film in a cinema, the place to see films with other people, long after seeing many of his other films at home, or online.
To say Jan Svankmajer is a special film maker is to put it lightly. His commitment to editing shows through every frame of every film that bears his name. As a surrealist film maker he has been involved in film making since his first film 'The Last Trick' made in 1964, 21 years after being given his first puppet theatre as a child. I will not go through here the journey from that first puppet theatre to his present retired status as a film maker, theatre designer, surrealist film maker and every other category of creative activity, aged over 90. I am going to leave that to Wikipedia-they do that sort of thing rather well, even though some folk dispute their pages.
'Alice' is not my favourite Svankmajer film, that would be 'Conspirators of Pleasure' which as a satire on how people consume and divide one another by certain activities also works well as a rather convoluted shaggy dog story that is not meant to be taken too literally. But 'Alice' is as near normal feature length cinema as Svankmajer gets. His version of Lewis Caroll's story is quite violent and uncomfortable, with a lot of images of nails in food, and of bones of unknown aniimals in cabinets of ossuaries, stop-motion animated stuffed animals, particularly the rabbit who is always late to meet the queen who is rarely present. But as dream/nightmare violence goes it is of a very different quality to, say, the violence of a news report of a bombing complete with distressing visuals, or a Tom and Jerry cartoon.
Yes, Alice and the rabbit get on badly, and to watch a stuffed animal leak sawdust after being kicked, and then sow up the hole where the sawdust leaked with a needle and thread it had found and eat up the sawdust with a tarnished spoon does stretch the imagination. The red queen and her court are reduced to playing cards that move by themselves across a stage set in what could perhaps be seen as a critique of human political/power structures - they are two dimentional at best. The number of iterations of Alice, and the number of times she is too big/too small and is presented with a situation that I read as an intellience test was quite notable. I was not going to count them, that went against the collective cinema experience. Though the literal minded could count the number of times Alice changes size and form if they had enough repeated viewings of the film. Then there was the device of getting from one scene to the next by diving into draws in desks where there were often sharp objects of different types-scissors, square sets, safety pins etc piled up in the draws, who knows what that was about? I am leaving that point here.... .....a lot more was going on with this film which remains open to interpretation where we can all have our own, and different reinterpretation when we come back to the film again.
I was pleased that the young people that run the LUMI programme at the QFT in Belfast are able to get these films that before an audience now, when in the past I was in the wrong place to find them when they were made and had their original cinema run. Back then I mostly heard about these films via reports and showings of them on television.