Saint
Clara Movie Review:
Saint
Clara, a 1996 film from Israel, is one of those works which
does so much in certain areas that it's more than a little
grim when it becomes clear the filmmakers didn`t have the
guts to go all the way with their premise. The film feels
somewhat unfinished, as if they did so much work in one
place they were too exhausted to finish the rest.
The
story has a strange premise. A 13-year old Russian immigrant,
Clara, has the power to predict the future, and to read
people`s thoughts. This sets up a catastrophic problem at
her school, when her entire class receives a perfect score
on the recent math test. The math teacher, with the help
of the overbearing principal, attempts over and over again
to actually put on a test without any cheating involved.
And again and again, it fails, even after a wonderfully
creative plan in which the teacher actually holds a lottery
whereby the questions are picked minutes before the test
is to begin. Clara, naturally, is able to tell all the students
before the teacher`s arrival what those questions will be.
At
the same time, a trio of hooligans who have nothing better
to do with their time than smash bottles against walls and
spy on people at night are in their own crisis because two
of the boys obviously have crushes on Clara. The crush is
so strong that it even comes to blows with a baseball bat.
And to top it off, we learn that if Clara ever falls in
love, she will lose her powers.
All
of this is great stuff. But after about the halfway point,
everything sort of petered out for me. The first half was
three-star material, as it mainly focussed on the school`s
concern about this possible conspiracy cooked up by the
math students. It was so quirky, I was just loving it. But
after a while, it disintegrated into the usual teeny-bopper
stuff, Hebrew style. Talk of "revolution" haunts the words
of a number of the students. As well, the principal speaks
in these vague terms to Clara, in the hopes his appearing
to be sympathetic to the youth`s concerns will make her
stop this academic mockery. At first, I wondered what this
whole talk was about. Then I dreaded it was the stupid teenage
type of revolution, and this film was aimed at the teenagers
who think the mere mention of the word from their peers'
mouths actually meant they were people on the side of right
against the tyranny of the adult world. And to prove it,
let`s go around smashing bottles and trying to set the school
on fire!!!
I
think one of the biggest problems of the movie is Clara
herself. The actress gives a somewhat listless performance,
at least compared to the other actors on screen. The other
characters are right in saying she does have entrancing
eyes, and she does have a nice face, but she doesn`t have
a really interesting character. She is humourless, and out
of touch with the real world. But, then again, she isn`t
really liked for her friendship but for her supernatural
abilities. So she is possibly being exploited by her 'friends'.
And she might be willing to help the class cheat on the
test, because it`s a way to fit in. Don`t we all try out
some kind of angle in order to make the rest of the world
accept us? While this theory is possible, I`m still not
as impressed by her as I am with others.
The
film`s delight remains in the purely academic situations,
as the principal and the teacher grow increasingly flabbergasted
at the challenge to their intellectual and supreme authority.
This ultimate exercise in cheating is seen as the ultimate
insult, and these professionals are in a battle to reclaim
their rights as superiors. When the teacher devises his
ingenious way to conduct the test, he is in a bliss which
he compares to his stint in Vietnam. This is fun stuff.
And a few other wacky scenes pointed the way to a strange,
and good, satire on the effects of such a unique person
in society. But it didn`t go all the way.
David
Macdonald
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