Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me / Ursula Macfarlane / USA / 2023

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Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me / Ursula Macfarlane / USA / 2023
Untouchable (2019), dir. Ursula Macfarlane
Le 5 octobre 2017, le New York Times publie un article coup de poing dénonçant les agissements d’un certain Harvey Weinstein, alors producteur incontournable à Hollywood. L’article fait scandale: c’est la première fois que des actrices osent parler d’abus ou harcèlements sexuels et le retentissement est mondial, amenant d’autres actrices à parler mais aussi des femmes ayant également subi des violences sexuelles (hors Affaire Weinstein) à travers le mouvement connu sous les hashtags #balancetonporc et #metoo. Ursula Macfarlane est allée à la rencontre de quelques unes de ces actrices (plus de 93 au total!) ou collaboratrices victimes de Weinstein et sort sur nos grands écrans un documentaire sur l’affaire, qui est encore en cours de jugement (un procès pénal est prévu pour le mois de septembre à l’issue duquel l’ex producteur risque la prison à vie). Retraçant les débuts professionnels de Weinstein qui fut d’abord promoteur de concerts à Buffalo avant de créer sa propre boîte de production de cinéma avec son frère Bob (Miramax), le documentaire “L’intouchable” alterne avec un certain rythme éléments biographiques et entretiens avec différents collaborateurs et témoignages de femmes abusées. Si sur le fond il n’apprend pas beaucoup de choses sur l’affaire et sur la forme il reste très classique, le documentaire ne laisse pas indifférent tant on ressent encore les stigmates du scandale retentissant de 2017 et on est touché par le témoignage de ces femmes qui, on le sent, pour certaines ont eu du mal à se remettre des abus subis. Voir le film rappelle qu’on ne doit plus considérer comme normales les différentes violences sexuelles auxquelles en tant que femme (le plus souvent) on est soumis depuis “toujours”.
L’Intouchable, Harvey Weinstein : un film documentaire à découvrir
Sorti le 14 août 2019, « L’Intouchable, Harvey Weinstein » joue en ce moment sur nos grands écrans. À savoir que c’est un film documentaire britannique réalisé par Ursula Macfarlane qui pourrait changer le monde. Notez que sa bande-annonce est disponible en ligne.
BRIEF ENCOUNTERS WITH GOOD DIRECTORS
It’s been a stop-start Summer in many ways. I took a lot of time off after China (see below) and a couple of big projects delayed and fell through. This left me with time to pick up the odd day here & there, which is usually something I avoid; like most DP’s I like to work on single films where one’s input is more meaningful. However when an excellent director you’ve not worked with before is in need of help on their latest project, then it’s always worth getting involved.
First up was Laura Fairrie (The Battle For Barking) over at Passion, who needed help on her feature doc about the rise of anti-semitism in Europe. The shoot was in Paris and Laura had already been filming for a year. Her excellent film opens up a can of worms on a huge subject. Next I was called by REEF for a one day shoot in New York filling in for DP Pat Smith. I took it because it was being directed by Ursula MacFarlane (Charlie Hebdo: Three Days That Shook Paris) and offered me the opportunity to film legendary Puerto Rican choreographer Julio Monge rehearsing with kids from East Harlem for a BBC anniversary film on West Side Story. It was a fiercely hot but fantastic experience filming with amazing dancers & musicians at Alvin Ailey Studios and the playground in East Harlem where the opening scene of the original movie was filmed. Then it was time for something altogether darker, joining Henry Singer (9/11: The Falling Man) and his directing partner Rob Miller on their latest feature doc about the systematic rape and abuse of young women in Rochdale by Pakistani gangs. Obviously this is an extremely sensitive subject; indeed one of our interviewees dropped out the night before. Our other contributor gave a long, courageous and harrowing account of her terrible experiences. Anonimity was key and we had to find ways of filming the interview whilst protecting her identity, which is always difficult. Finally I have just had the pleasure of working with Canadian filmmaker & cinematographer John Walker (Quebec My Country Mon Pays) who is beginning work on a new feature doc based on the book, ‘Assholes: A Theory’, by Harvard philosophy PHD Arron James. The production was in London to film an interview with John Cleese, which was great fun. I have just read the book and thoroughly recommend it. (It was enough to provoke Steven Soderbergh into quitting Hollywood!).