Tag Archives: SHADOWS IN PARADISE

WEEKEND CLASSICS — AKI KAURISMÄKI: ARIEL

Aki Kaurismäki’s ARIEL is part of Weekend Classics series at the IFC Center

ARIEL (Aki Kaurismäki, 1988)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
October 14-16, $13, 11:00 am
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

Following last weekend’s screenings of the first part of Aki Kaurismäki’s Proletariat Trilogy, 1986’s Shadows in Paradise, the IFC Center will be showing the second part, 1988’s Ariel, Friday through Sunday at 11:00 am. More of a conceptual sequel than a continuing narrative, Ariel stars Turo Pajala as Taisto Kasurinen, a Finnish miner who has just lost his job because the mine has closed. Sitting at a diner with his father/coworker, Taisto barely flinches as the elder Kasurinen tells him that there is nothing for him here, gives him the keys to his white Cadillac convertible, and goes into the bathroom and shoots himself. Taisto, with ever-changing facial hair in the beginning, quickly gets mugged, his meager life savings stolen from him. He seeks day work on the docks and sort of starts dating single mother Irmeli Pihlaja (Susanna Haavisto), who has never met a job she couldn’t quit that day. Taisto soon finds himself in prison for a ridiculous reason — and one he doesn’t really fight, as he generally just sits back and lets things happen to him — and meets fellow inmate Mikkonen (Shadows in Paradise’s Matti Pellonpää), and the two decide it’s time to take action and break out. A very dark, very black comedy that mixes in elements of romance and noir, Ariel is an absurdist existential feast, following Taisto and his compatriots as they make their very strange way through a very bizarre world. The third part of the trilogy, The Match Factory Girl (1990), will screen October 28-30, taking a week off as Kaurismäki’s latest, the wonderful Le Havre, opens at the IFC on October 21.

WEEKEND CLASSICS — AKI KAURISMÄKI: SHADOWS IN PARADISE

Matti Pellonpää and Kati Outinen star as two lonely souls in Aki Kaurismäki’s SHADOWS IN PARADISE

SHADOWS IN PARADISE (VARJOJA PARATIISISSA) (Aki Kaurismäki, 1986)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
October 7-10, $13, 11:00 am
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

In celebration of writer-director Aki Kaurismäki’s first feature film in five years, Le Havre, which just played the New York Film Festival and opens at the IFC Center on October 21, IFC is screening several of the Finnish auteur’s earlier works as part of its Weekend Classics series. On October 7-10 at 11:00 am, the first film in Kaurismäki’s Proletariat Trilogy, Shadows in Paradise, will be shown, a marvelous example of Kaurismäki’s trademark deadpan humor set amid a bleak world filled with lonely characters. Matti Pellonpää, a regular in the films of both Aki and his brother, Mika Kaurismäki, stars as Nikander, a garbage man who is offered a job as a foreman in a new company being started by a coworker (Esko Nikkari). But when the coworker suddenly drops dead of a heart attack, Nikander drinks himself into the drunk tank, where he meets Melartin (Sakari Kuosmanen), an unemployed married man with a child. Melartin takes the dead man’s place in Nikander’s original garbage truck. Meanwhile, Nikander is interested in going out with Ilona (Kati Outinen, in her first of many Kaurismäki films), a shy supermarket cashier who has just been fired and evicted and so has decided to steal her boss’s cash box. Nikander and Ilona are a terrible couple; he is far more interested in her than she is in him, and he lets her use and abuse him, all taking place in short, slow scenes with little dialogue and movement. Every time she leaves, she comes back, much to his chagrin, or delight — it’s often hard to tell, as neither character displays much emotion or reveals anything of their inner selves. It’s all wildly funny, the dark humor offset by the bright blues and oranges of Tuula Hilkamo’s costumes and Pertti Hilkamo and Heikki Ukkonen’s art direction. In many ways it’s reminiscent of Jim Jarmusch’s Stranger Than Paradise (1984), just in color; interestingly, Pellonpää went on to play a major role in the Helsinki section of Jarmusch’s Night on Earth (1991). Bleak but beautiful, Shadows in Paradise is a charming romantic black comedy about two lonely souls who are neither charming nor romantic. The Weekend Classics series continues at the IFC Center with the last two parts of the Proletariat Trilogy, Ariel (1988) on October 14-16 and The Match Factory Girl (1990) on October 28-30