
In addition to capturing a way of life and the incredible and sometimes bleak surroundings, Espérance also beautifully films a powerful storm in the night sky. We see the family huddled in their small hut as lightning rips across the sky, once again victim to forces beyond their control.
La Montée au Ciel, directed by Stephane Breton opens with a close up on the incredible, weathered face of a Nepali shepherd, whose life is mapped out in the fine lines – this is fitting for a documentary that was made as part of a series called Visages du monde (Faces of the World) in memory of Nicolas Bouvier, the Swiss writer and traveller. The next shot shows this sole Nepali shepherd quietly smoking a cigarette under an umbrella amidst the green mountains. A feeling of solitude is instantly created, as is a reflective, meditative atmosphere.The documentary then moves to a poor Brahman village, where all are bickering over the exact dimensions of their land. Oppressiveness is thick here as we see the worn faces, worn clothes, thick mud and ever-present flies. These conditions and the density of population concentrated in this one place, despite the enormous surrounding space available, create a desire to get away and head for the hills.
Breton himself is never directly present in the documentary, leaving the villagers and the place to speak for themselves. This is total immersion, and beside the occasional looks at the camera from protagonists, the audience could almost forget the director is even there. After the screening, Breton told us that he wanted to show these people as they are and he does so very successfully.
After the heated scenes in the village, the director follows two shepherds in their ascent up the mountain with their herds. Silence and solitude are built upon as we first see one of the shepherds slowly making chapatti in his room, and then later lying down to sleep on the mountain slopes as his herd grazes, sheltered from the rain only by a sheet of plastic. As the film moves up, it also moves to the interior. The ascent is a meditative trip, filled with a quiet spirituality, timelessness and pastoral solitude. It is quiet beautiful.
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