Cinequest: THE MEMORY OF WATER

THE MEMORY OF WATER
THE MEMORY OF WATER

The most masterful filmmaking achievement at Cinequest 2016 might just be the Chilean drama The Memory of Water by Matias Bize. The Memory of Water is an exploration of grief, its process and its impact. After all, the individuals who make up couples grieve in different ways and at different paces.

We meet a couple (Benjamin Vicuña and Elena Anaya) who has recently experienced a tragedy.  He is undertaking an everyday task.  She is (literally) revisiting the tragedy.  Director Bize brilliantly takes us to the wall in the home where parents record the height of their growing kid –  the camera scans up the marks for  2, 2/12, 3, 3 1/2 and then stops after 4.  We understand.

The husband is extremely sensitive and tries his best to comfort her.  It’s not enough.  She tells him that he needs to cry just once.  The movie is his journey to being able to cry that one time.

We see him at work, faced with something that reminds him of the tragedy,  She is a medical translator and, in the most heartrending scene, must maintain her poise to get through a task that no one should be asked to perform.  There’s an explosive sex scene, beautifully shot in red light, that’s all about the release of passion in an encounter that is itself passionless and meaningless.

And we see water.  Water that evokes tragic memory.  And water in a different form that brings joyful memory.  And, finally, water in a scene of closure.

The Memory of Water explores the same ground as Rabbit Hole, the excellent Nicole Kidman/Aaron Eckhardt film based on David Lindsay-Abaire’s Pulitzer- and Tony-winning play. But The Memory of Water is better cinema.

The 35-year-old Bize (The Life of Fish) is a major filmmaking talent.  The Memory of Water is a Must See at this year’s Cinequest and screens on March 2, 10 and 12.