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16044: Hermantin: Haitian creativity outlasted nation's tyranny (fwd)



From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>

Posted on Sun, Jun. 29, 2003

Haitian creativity outlasted nation's tyranny
BY KATHELINE ST. FORT
Special to The Herald

Though Haitian filmmakers have a long way to go, it has come some distance,
surviving dictators and destitution.

Throughout the country's history, imported films were the norm. Sure, Haiti
was ridiculed in voodoo-craze fares by directors like Victor Halperin in
White Zombie (1932) and Arthur Leonard's The Devil's Daughter (1939). But
there was still not much of a home-grown cinematic movement.

Then, in the late 1950s, Francois ''Papa Doc'' Duvalier seized power,
paralyzing arts movements and crushing any hopes for the advent of a movie
industry.

''He was a complete paranoid,'' notes retired Webster University assistant
professor and Haiti expert Robert Corbett of the Haitian dictator, in an
e-mail interview. ``He distrusted everyone and nothing in the country was
[done in] secret. He was most particularly sensitive after Graham Greene
published his novel The Comedians. He intensely distrusted foreigners.''

That feeling intensified when Greene's novel, filmed by MGM, portrayed
Duvalier as a tyrannical maniac. The film was banned for decades.

But the Duvaliers' animosity was not directed at just foreigners. Director
Arnold Antonin was forced into exile after his documentary Duvalier Accused
was released in 1973. From then on, most films about Haiti were either
produced outside the country, as was Cuban director Thomas Gutierrez Alea's
Coumbite. Or, they were politically harmless exercises like Raphael Stines'
1975 screen adaptation of Jacques Roumain's prize-winning novel The
Governors of the Dew.

Despite censorship, several socially conscious films were able to snare the
approval of Duvalier's government. Among them: Rassoul Labuchin's child
labor fiction Anita and Bob Lemoine's tale of class division, Olivia.

Then, in 1985, Raynald Delerme, who had left Haiti to study film abroad,
returned and teamed with the late comedian Theodore Beaubrun for the
successful, shot-on-video Founerailles (The Funeral). Soon, other
moviemakers started to turn to video, most notably Raphael Stines, with
Kraze Lanfe (Breaking Hell), a scathing portrayal of the regime of Francoise
Duvalier's son, Jean-Claude.

By then, the Duvalier dynasty had ended, the newly elected president
Jean-Bertrand Aristide suffered a coup d'etat, and a military government had
taken over. But the new leaders saw Stines' movie as an indictment against
them and lead actor Fenel ''Jesifra'' Valcourt had to go into hiding.

After Stines' experience, moviemakers tended to steer away from political
subjects. Soapish, sensational dramas like Jean-Gardy Bien-Aimé's Le Cap a
la Une (To the One), targeting the youth market, became the standard.

Then, in late 2001, Reginald Lubin released his digital-video feature La
Peur D'aimer (The Fear of Loving), about a young woman's unplanned
pregnancy, using film-structure techniques -- such as good cinematography
and a strong script -- known to global cinema but largely ignored and unused
in Haitian cinema. The sensation it caused prompted other filmmakers to
follow suit and spawned higher expectations in movie fans. That's when, to
many, digital video seemed like a godsend.

''In a country like Haiti, where 40 percent of the population is
illiterate,'' states Antonin, who heads the Bolivar Arts Center in
Port-Au-Prince, ``audio-visuals are especially important.''

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