the man who talks to his shoes
by Douglas Messerli
Henning Carlsen and Peter Seeberg (screenplay, based on the
novel by Knut Hamsun), Henning Carlsen (director) Sult (Hunger) / 1966
In Hamsun's narrative very little actually happens. His work is a piece
of internal language, a conversation with the self that the unnamed character
carries on as, starving, out of work, and homeless, he wanders the streets of
Kristiania. Only a few things in real time actually transpire: he writes an
article and attempts to place it with a publisher; he observes a lovely and
slightly flirtatious woman whom he dubs Ylajali (Gunnel Lindblom); although we
cannot be certain, since many of the events are those of his imagination, he
may actually visit Ylajali and contemplate having sex; he stares in the windows
of the various stores and encounters some of his friends from the past; he is
kicked out of his rooming house and briefly finds another (for one night) only
to be ousted the next day by a boarder whom he observes having sex with the
landlady; and he sits on park benches, sometimes talking to his worn-out shoes
as if they could understand and converse with him.
In short, there is no traditional story attached to this work; it is
merely a series of psychological incidents played out upon a realist setting,
the Oslo of 1890. That is, in part, why Hamsun's fiction was so innovative and
ground-breaking. Without any of the gewgaws of plot, Hamsun had created a
character so amazing that he stands alongside of the memorable figures of
Dostoevsky, Kafka, Camus, and others.
Miraculously, the film has come through remarkably well, and, although
different in many ways from the literary work, is true to its essence. Of
course, most of the praise must go to Hunger's
brilliant director, Henning Carlsen, who filmed in black and white (and
sometimes sepia), more closely linking it to the silent pictures with which the
original book is aligned. There are occasional conversations in the film, and
the noises of the street itself—the clip-clop of horses, the drum of the feet
of workers and ladies out for a stroll—but for all that it may as well be
described as a silent film. And Carlsen and cinematographer, Henning
Kristiansen, have used their camera to catch the smallest of bodily nuances,
the grimaces of disgust on the faces of
the bourgeois citizens of Kristiania as they pass the beggar-like hero,
a dog's violent gnaw of a bone (which our hero would love to share), the
scuttle of a rat, the blinks of Ylajali's large eyes. All of these help to make
the film come alive and replace what might have ordinarily been told in
dialogue.
But a large of the film's success must be accorded to the actor Per
Oscarsson who plays the hero (Pontus as he is called in the film) with all the
aplomb of Chaplin and Keaton combined. Oscarsson won the Best Actor award at
the 1966 Cannes Film Festival, well deserved surely. From the very first scene,
as Pontus stands with his back to us on a bridge, the actor completely
enthralls us with his every bodily move. In this scene he seems to be doing
something that we cannot quite interpret, yet appears to be something slightly
obscene, a regular movement of the hands. Is he masturbating in open public?
When the camera finally moves in, revealing his actions, we humorously
recognize that he is, metaphorically speaking, masturbating. He is attempting
to write with a pencil upon a slip of paper. Yet he seems to be getting
nowhere, repeating again and again a date, circling empty words, etc. Writing
is not an easy task in the open air.
Pontus, as I have mentioned above, has not eaten for several days, and
when he finishes his attempts to write, he rips off a small bit a paper and
stuffs it into his mouth, simply to chew on something. Oscarsson's lean,
unshaven face is perfect for the role. We can see that he is handsome even in
his haunting decay. If only....might someone in this society come his rescue?
Yet by the film's end we know that would be impossible. This is a proud and
self-destructive man, a kind of hunger-artist, determined to get by on almost
nothing. He awards even his bedding to another unfortunate. Time and again, at
the editor's offices and when he encounters friends, etc., asked if he needs a
small advance or for them to provide a meal, Pontus lies to hide his penniless
situation. When he is accidently overpaid at a grocer’s whom has visited to
purchase a candle, he throws the coins into the hands a woman beggar and
returns to the grocer to upbraid his inattention. When he finally is able to
buy a little soup, he discovers he can longer stomach it. As played by
Oscarsson, Pontus is a nineteenth-century dandy in the dress of a fool, a
man—one is tempted to say, much like the author—who, despite the turmoil and
terrors of the upcoming century would remain a romantic.
Los Angeles, January 21, 2012
Reprinted from International Cinema Review (January 2012).



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