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Film

The film-maker who Ceausescu couldn't kill

Romanian director Radu Mihaileanu loves stories, but his own life may be the most fascinating of all.

July 15, 2010 10:22
Director Radu Mihaileanu

By

Stephen Applebaum,

Stephen Applebaum

5 min read

Radu Mihaileanu cannot help telling stories. "I don't know where it comes from," says the Franco-Romanian film-maker, "but I think it's deeply Jewish to hear stories and tell stories. We have always done that."

To date, the 52-year-old director's vibrant tales for the screen have included the acclaimed Train of Life, in which the inhabitants of a shtetl try to survive by posing as Nazis and deporting themselves to safety; and Live and Become, in which a nine-year-old Christian boy escapes the squalor of a Sudanese refugee camp by joining the secret Israeli transport of Ethiopian Jews to Israel known as Operation Moses.

The theme of identity - fake and real - is also central to his new film, The Concert. In Communist-era Russia, Andrei Filipov (Alexei Guskov), the gentile conductor (inspired by real-life conductor Evgeny Svetlanov) of the Bolshoi Orchestra, is stripped of his position during a performance of the Tchaikovsky concerto for refusing to expel his Jewish musicians. Thirty years later, while working at the theatre as a janitor, he intercepts a fax inviting the orchestra to play at the
Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris. In a quest for redemption, Filipov rounds up the sacked musicians, and, using forged travel documents, leads them, Moses-like, on a mission to finish the concert they were prevented from completing in the 1980s, and regain their identity, dignity and pride.

The film is a compelling blend of drama, comedy and politics, where the music, says Mihaileanu, is a metaphor for the "energy", the "beautiful music", we all have inside us. "The problem is, sometimes we don't know how to express it. There are so many elements in life that push us to kneel and push us to not be free. But the human being - and this is very Jewish, in a way - is not made to kneel. The film says: 'Try to do it. Try to stand up.'"