52 Films by Women Vol 5. 2. SYSTEM CRASHER (Director: Nora Fingscheidt)
We like to believe
that everyone can be helped. Human beings can be lifted out of poverty, taught
to walk again, have their cancer removed and their psychic trauma reduced to a
manageable state. Central to this is an unwritten contract between society and
the individual: submit to treatment and you will be cured. The individual must
buy into their own salvation. Unfortunately, some people can’t and won’t
submit. They have their addictions to manage, their perceived needs and bad
habits. Benni (Helena Zengel) the nine-year old titular System Crasher of writer-director Nora Fingscheidt’s film is
one such person. She cannot bear to have her face touched – it turns her feral.
Rejected by multiple group homes for her violent conduct and unable to live
with her mother (Lisa Hagmeister) – Benni doesn’t approve of her mother’s
boyfriend and when she won’t ask him to leave, Benni attacks her with a jug –
she remains a force to be contained. Micha (Albrecht Schuch) has an idea: to
take her to the woods for three weeks, working one-to-one. No television, no
electricity. But can Benni adjust?
Fingscheidt
developed her film over seven years out of an obsession with her own
hyperactivity as a child. Her film falls into the sub-genre of ‘l’enfant
sauvage’, only Benni is no child raised by wolves (as in the 1970 François Truffaut film) but a young girl with boundary issues. Right from the
outset, she is hard to watch, verbally abusing adults and being mean to other
children. She hates school, the exposure, the judgment of others. She is
completely asocial. Her only sense of self is as an older sibling, the clever
caring one. She wants to watch children’s television, perceiving in it a source
of calm. She is also clever and cunning, with a great sense of her power as a
child, having a protected status that she will never enjoy as an adult.
The director uses bursts of pink lights,
drops in sound and blurred disorientating camerawork to illustrate Benni’s torment.
For those around her, this is experienced as violence. (The sequences also
preview future set pieces, as when there is an unexplained shot of an ice
skate.) System
Crasher is a violent film; the viewer next to
me hid his eyes during one sequence. Do you want to watch one child slam
another child’s head against a desk or attack a boy on an ice rink? You are not
entertained. Rather you are horrified.
I found myself at roughly half hour
intervals checking my watch – not just because I bought a new strap but because
I wondered how much of this depressing, yet still intensely watchable movie I
had to endure? Fingscheidt doesn’t believe in miracle cures – the revelation
that explains Benni’s torment and gives her the key to managing her own
condition. Instead, Benni endangers everyone around her.
Just occasionally, Fingscheidt withdraws
from her subject. There is a happy scene in which Benni joins her siblings at a
fast food restaurant and is overjoyed to hear that her mother wants her back,
so overjoyed that she knocks the French fries that her family is looking
forward to and stands on the table, waving her arms in the air. Fingscheidt
shows a mother usher her children away from Benni as well as the cleaner who
sweeps up the fallen fries. Benni is in her zone of selfish happiness. She only
has her own pleasure at heart.
Benni is initially intolerant of Micha
but goes with him to the woods. She isn’t great at fetching milk – a farmer
accuses Micha of facilitating animal abuse. A farm dog barks at Benni. Benni
barks back and throws a rock at the animal. Benni bonds with Micha after he
gives her tools to smash up a wooden structure. We then see her push over a
tree. However, when we see Benni around an axe, I started to worry. At one
point, she runs away. A distraught Micha eventually finds her in the farmer’s
house watching television. She had spent the night in a cow shed.
Micha hopes to win her over by showing
her where the barn owls live. Their home is empty. Benni is interested in
Micha’s home. Reluctantly, he brings her there.
The adult response is initially caring.
Micha’s wife looks at Benni and gives her a bath. Benni asks awkward questions
like ‘why are you having one child straight after the other’. ‘It wasn’t
planned.’ ‘You should use better contraception.’
Helena Zengel gives
one of the most exceptional child performances in recent years, genuinely
becoming the character. Recognition for her work is widespread. Director Paul
Greengrass cast her opposite Tom Hanks in his next film, News of the World. Zengel has also been nominated for a
European Film Award as Best Actress. Great performances generally come from
great characters, and Benni is utterly memorable and remorseless, rude and
resistant to socialisation. After the film, I started to recognise system crashers
as a social type, unwilling to compromise and angry with everyone, using
phrases like ‘I am beyond furious’, which sounded like the fifth film of the Mad Max series. They are creators of one long shouting match as you are trapped
in their world of unreason.
Reviewed at London Film Festival, Cine Lumiere, South Kensington, Central London, Saturday 5 October 2019, 17:50 screening in the presence of the director
Review originally published on Bitlanders.com
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