http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2007/07/27/bucharest_airs_a
_bleakly_funny_take_on_revolution/
 
MOVIE REVIEW

'Bucharest' airs a bleakly funny take on revolution


By Ty Burr, Globe Staff  |  July 27, 2007

A dingy, mordantly comic "Rashomon" for the post-Soviet era, "12:08 East of
Bucharest" is another sign that Romanian cinema is on the move.
Writer-director Corneliu Porumboiu's tale of small-town truth and
reconciliation -- or nervous avoidance of same -- is told with the slowpoke
realism of last year's "The Death of Mr. Lazarescu," but like that film it
finds political echoes in the smallest of everyday occurrences. That its
characters don't is reason for hollow laughter.

The film starts off so aimlessly that one critic at the screening I attended
impatiently stormed off 30 minutes in. His loss; the payoff here is messy
but sublime. In the tiny burg of Vaslui, a local TV station owner and on-air
personality, Jderescu (Teo Corban), scrambles to find guests for his evening
talk show. It's Dec. 22, 2005 -- the 16th anniversary of the protests that
toppled dictator Nicolae Ceausescu -- and the topic is "Was there or was
there not a revolution in our town?"

Either no one's an expert on the subject or no one wants to be. The best
Jderescu can come up with is the alcoholic, debt-ridden high school teacher
Manescu (Ion Sapdaru, bleakly hilarious) and a cranky old windbag named
Piscoci (Mircea Andreescu), who's more concerned with finding a Santa Claus
costume that fits his portly frame. It's the Christmas season, but no one's
feeling particularly jolly.

The Romania on display in the first half of "12:08" is a broken-down machine
-- the opening shots are of rusty streetlights flickering off in the dawn --
but the general response is ennui rather than despair. The three men start
their day in separate states of moral exhaustion. Manescu borrows from Peter
to pay Paul and regrets his drunken tirade the night before. Jderescu pleads
with his mistress (Cristina Ciofu) not to ditch him on New Year's Eve.
Piscoci battles the school kids who light firecrackers outside his door.

Revolution? What revolution? Manescu's students know their facts about the
French Revolution but come up blank otherwise. Jderescu insists "there's no
present without the past," but the mistress scoffs that nobody cares. The
title refers to the precise moment on Dec. 22, 1989, when the battle turned
in favor of the protesters, and in theory it's a time stamp that holds a
similar relevance for modern Romania as July 4, 1776, does for Americans:
the watershed between tyranny and freedom.

For Jderescu, the question becomes: Where were you at 12:08? Out in the
streets or hiding at home? Were you part of the revolution or merely caught
up in the tidal wave? The unspoken follow-up is that if you didn't take
part, do you deserve the resulting freedoms? Are you even ready for them?

It's a prickly point that extends far beyond the borders of Romania, even if
Porumboiu aims most of his darts at his countrymen. The TV show, when it
finally staggers on the air, is a deadpan farce of good intentions, the
host's bland expression slowly crumbling under the Eastern European
equivalent of Murphy's Law. The kid running the camera wants to get arty.
The guests keep swearing. The phone-in callers are ready to sue.

One of the guests insists he was protesting in the town square before 12:08,
a true son of the uprising. As his memory is picked apart bit by bit,
though, the truth becomes increasingly, amusingly unknowable. Do heroes
really exist, or are there only events? Perhaps all of Romania watched the
revolution on TV; perhaps it never happened. Perhaps that's why everyone in
Vaslui looks so perplexed.

This is the comedy of the prostrate, yet "12:08" isn't without hope.
Porumboiu knows that every dank laugh opens the window a little wider and
lets in the air of self-awareness. For all its pessimism, the movie prompts
a viewer to search his or her own memories for actions rather than
reactions, and to mull over the differences between the two. It's a dark
little ride, but at the end the lights hesitantly flicker back on.

Ty Burr can be reached at  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] For
more on movies, go to boston.com/ae/movies/blog.

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