Rather than providing
conventional historical contextualization or even straightforward reportage,
this arty documentary project from megaproducer David L. Wolper lets eight
internationally acclaimed filmmakers offer cinematic sketches of the
Olympics, with the 1972 summer games in Munich as their canvas. The terrorist
attacks that left 11 Israeli athletes dead receive only passing mention, not
out of disrespect but rather because Wolper’s film was designed to celebrate
timeless aspects of the Olympics. As with most anthology pictures, Visions of Eight is a hit-or-miss
affair, but even the iffy sequences are imaginative, so as a total
viewing experience, Visions of Eight
is offbeat, unpredictable, and, just as Woper intended, inspirational. Given a
clear shape thanks to well-crafted introductory and closing segments overseen
by Mel Stewart (who directed Wolper’s beloved 1971 theatrical feature Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory),
the film moves gracefully between quasi-narrative sequences and experimental
passages.
Yuri Ozerov’s “The Beginning” is among the merely serviceable
vignettes. Mai Zetterling’s weight-lifting sequence “The Strongest” loses focus
despite flashy cinematography and editing, because Zetterling
drifts into random stats (Olympians ate 1.1 million eggs over the course of the
’72 games) and images of computers processing data. Infusing “The Decathalon”
with his characteristically antiauthoritarian humor, Milos Forman juxtaposes pageantry
with mundane details such as officials yawning between events, and he tips his
hand by narrating, “I got to see the Olympics for free and had the best seats.”
Arguably the best sequence is Claude Lelouch’s “The Losers,” which offers a poignant alternative to familiar
views of triumphant athletes.
Innovative Hollywood director Arthur Penn gets a bit carried away with “The
Highest,” employing artsy audio drops, slow motion, and soft focus to transform
high jumps into audiovisual abstractions, though it must be said that parts of
“The Highest” are quite beautiful. Michael Pfleghar’s “The Women” underwhelms, and Kon
Ichikawa’s “The Fastest” obnoxiously celebrates its own technical
complexity via narration that explains how 24 cameras and
20,000 feet of film were used to record a 100-yard-dash in granular detail. The
final segment, John Schlesinger’s “The Longest,” lives up to its title,
offering a repetitive look at an English marathoner.
Still, Visions of Eight
amply rewards the viewer’s attention. The best sequences are terrific, the
cumulative abundance of atmosphere and information is impressive, and the
license Wolper gave to his collaborators resulted in great stylistic variety.
Never lost amid the directorial flourishes is the sincere theme of the piece,
which has to do with extolling the values of achievement and community.
Visions of Eight: GROOVY
1 comment:
That is not Olga Korbut on the uneven bars in "The Women" segment. That is Ludmilla Tourischeva, who won the gold medal in the All-Around.
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