52 Films by Women Vol 4. 8. BUDAPEST NOIR (Director: Éva Gárdos)
With a title like Budapest Noir, you
know what you’re going to get. It’s a film set in Budapest and has many of the
tropes of a film noir. By tropes, I don’t mean a coastal town on the French
Riviera. I’m talking dead bodies, dark shadows, heavy-set guys who give you a
beating and tell you to lay off your investigation, beautiful women, cigarettes
and a conspiracy. Oh and a voiceover, weary of the world, accompanied by a jazz
trumpet and maybe some double bass.
The film is based on a novel, the first in a series by
Vilmos Kondor. (Note: Hungarians write names with the surname first, but I’ll
stick with the English convention here.) Its protagonist is newspaper reporter Gordon
Zsigmond (Krisztián Kolovratnik) who we first meet buying smokes from a
one-armed street tobacconist on the day of the funeral of Hungarian Prime
Minister Gyula Gömbös in October 1936. Gömbös got pretty friendly with one
Adolf Hitler and hoped to ‘remodel the country internally on dictatorial lines’
(as his entry in the Encyclopaedia
Britannica puts it). He might have gotten away with it but for his
testicular cancer. At any rate, anti-Semitism persisted in Hungary, leading to
the formation in March 1939 of the Nazi-like ‘Arrow Cross’ Party, named after
an ancient symbol of the Magyar tribes. (For more, read the blog post ‘Ghetto
of Budapest’.)
Director Éva Gárdos, who got her big break as a production
assistant on Apocalypse Now and alternates
between editing (Under the Cherry Moon, Agnes Browne, Children of Glory, The Truth about Lies) and directing
(An American Rhapsody, Magic Boys) doesn’t reinvent the
genre on feminist lines, although she does give agency to one female character.
The screenplay by the late András Szekér underplays some of the elements in
Kondor’s novel, ostensibly to make the reveal that much more surprising.
Gordon finds himself reunited with his ex-girlfriend,
Krisztina (Réka Tenki) who has just returned from Nazi Germany in a hurry and
is seeking employment as a photographer. When Gordon gets a tip off about a
dead body, he hires Krisztina. Gordon is shocked to discover that he knows the
dead woman (Franciska Törőcsik). At a restaurant, she came to his table and
apologised. Gordon had no idea why until he is told that his bill includes the
young woman’s dinner. ‘I was only borrowing the money,’ a note will tell him
later.
The corpse is remarkable for one thing – no blood. The woman
was felled by a blow. But when Gordon visits the morgue to check the body for
further clues and look at the autopsy report, the body has gone. The woman, as
it turns out, was two months pregnant. Someone didn’t want the child.
Gordon’s search takes him to a sleazy photographer, Skublics
(Szabolcs Thuróczy) who keeps schtum. Then he visits a high class brothel
frequented by politicians. His investigation takes place against the backdrop
of growing anti-Semitism. In one scene, he visits a club where the male singer
is heckled for performing a Jewish dirge. Gordon stands up for him and the
racists are ejected. Gordon finds that Skublics will talk only after he is
photographed in the company of some reviled political activists. (‘This will
ruin him,’ one character remarks, looking at the picture.)
Gordon and Krisztina are like a Hungarian Nick and Nora
Charles. Gordon’s investigation pales without her contribution. He is convinced
that she will not be able to photograph Skublics as the exit to a meeting hall
is poorly lit. ‘Don’t tell me that a picture can’t be taken!’ Krisztina remarks,
before boarding a nearby taxi and asking the driver to put on his headlights
when she gives the word. Gordon is impressed and jumps on the outside of the
cab as it speeds away, pursued by some of the men in Krisztina’s photograph.
Gordon has a lighter given to him by Krisztina. It ends up
at a murder scene. The police chief Gellert (Zsolt Anger) can charge Gordon
straight away but gives him time to clear his name. Gordon’s search takes him
to some street fighters. One of the boxers roughed him up in his search for
answers; the boxer has a young daughter who bites into a scarf that Gordon
remembers belonged to the dead woman. He gives the young girl one pengö (the
national currency) which she refuses as she ‘doesn’t do that’. Gordon explains
that he doesn’t want anything.
Without Krisztina’s help, Gordon would have been unable to
meet with a dress designer and search her house for clues. He finds a document
that takes him back to a character that we met at the beginning. A cake
promised in Act One goes off in Act Five. Gordon finds himself turning down
coffee and wanting bourbon.
Throughout the film, Gordon’s fondness for Krisztina is
rekindled, most notably in the darkroom – red light bulbs have that effect.
However, Krisztina has an offer to exhibit her work – photographs taken in Nazi
Germany – in London, where she is glad people care. What does Gordon think? He
doesn’t say but he knows he cannot stop her leaving him a second time. Her
looming departure is as inevitable as the rise of fascism.
The film is handsomely staged, with convincing, if
airbrushed period detail. We see boxing matches where the two fighters are
women – apparently their bouts were popular. It opens with a whoosh of smoke
from a 1930s locomotive as a coffin containing Gyula Gömbös is carried out.
Gordon is supposed to be writing Gömbös’ obituary, but he is more interested in
the dead girl (‘Murder on Nagydiófa Street’). He does produce the obit, cobbled
from stories printed in the foreign press.
The one-armed tobacconist tells us how far Hungary has come
by the end of the film; his window has been broken. He wants to get out. As one
reviewer has remarked, there are parallels with contemporary Hungary under
Viktor Orbán, who, like Gömbös, has racist leanings. However, melancholy regret
is not a sufficient response to the nationalist erosion of human dignity. Budapest
Noir is too soft on the toxic nastiness of racism that it depicts. You
sense that there is one eye on the sequel: Krisztina returns from London to
help Gordon again, hopefully not discovering a woman leaving the apartment as
she does here. Given the poor domestic response to the film, this seems
unlikely.
Reviewed at JW3, Edgware Road, North London, Thursday 3
January 2019, 14:30 screening
Review originally published on Bitlanders.com
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