Human Flow *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Ai Weiwei.
Written by: Chin-Chin Yap &Tim
Finch & Boris Cheshirkov.
Ai
Weiwei’s Human Flow is a globetrotting documentary that goes from one war
ravished place to another documenting the flow of refugees as they flee
violence, persecution and natural disasters looking to find a better life
elsewhere – and how, everywhere they go, they find more and more barriers to
their travels. Ai Weiwei has, for a long time, been one of China’s most famous
and outspoken artists and human rights activists – he has gotten himself in
trouble many times, but he’s going to keep on doing what he does – which is,
sometimes quite literally, giving the middle finger to the powers that be.
Human Flow is done in the same spirit, although the tone is a touch more civil
than I thought it may be coming from Ai Weiwei.
In
the film, Ai goes from place to place interviewing the people who lives have
been turned upside down by the crisis – and are no running for their lives,
alongside their family. He treats everyone he meets with the upmost respect,
and while he does get details of their stories, he doesn’t linger on them. He
also talks to experts on the crisis, and just how bad it has gotten – and has a
host of statistics, news stories and quotes littered throughout the movie –
some going across the bottom of the screen like a news ticker. He doesn’t spend
much time at all with those who are against the refugees – those who have
built, or want to build, walls and fences to keep them out. The film alternates
between two types of scenes and imagery – much of the on the ground footage
seems to have been shot by Ai himself with hand held cameras or an iPhone for
example, in which he captures the individual stories. There are also a lot of overhead
shots – presumably from drones – which capture the whole wide scope of the
migrations that are going on. The reasoning is clear – he is trying to capture
both the epic and the intimate about this crisis, putting any number of human
faces on the crisis, but not wanting the forest to get lost because of the
trees.
This
approach has its positives and its negatives. On one hand the decision to
pretty much go everywhere on the planet where people are being displaced makes
the sheer, epic scale of the crisis felt – it’s not one or two issues that we
can solve, and make it go away, it doesn’t really allow for any in depth
reporting on any of it. This is, I think, by design – as Ai is basically
showing us people from all backgrounds, faiths, ethnicities, etc. being
displaced – which should make it clear that it isn’t a simple, easy fix. At the
same time though, it does make the whole thing seem so large that there is no
way to solve it all, and as the numbers scroll across the screen, you may well
be floored. Still, I can imagine someone like Donald Trump or his supporters
(Trump is never named in the film, but it’s still what Ai feels about him)
thinking that the crisis is too large from them to handle, and perhaps closing
the border is the only way to go. After all, how could America deal with an
influx of people this large?
What
Ai is going for in Human Flow though should provide at least part of that
answer – he is appealing to our shared humanity, and counting on the goodness
of people to find a way solve the problem. It isn’t going to go away – and no
wall can prevent it. So, what are we going to do?
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