Dream of Light
Jacques Rivette's La belle noiseuse was a four-hour meditation on the
relationship between an artist and his model. Here Spanish director
Víctor Erice spends half the time on the same subject, but instead of
Emmanuelle Béart his model is a shapely quince tree. And Dream of
Light is the more moving and visually rapturous achievement -- even though
realist painter Antonio López's method is torturously painstaking and
his relation to his model more like bondage and discipline. He frames the tree
with rods and strings and plumb lines and inserts spikes into the ground to
place his feet so he can align his point of view over the months he labors on
his canvas. He erects a canopy over his head to protect himself and the tree
from the elements; he marks the leaves with white paint to measure the distance
they droop with the weight of the ripening fruit. His impossible dream is to
capture the tree at its height of beauty and in ideal light before the fruit
drops off. Interrupting him are visits from his wife and daughters and fellow
painter Enrique Gran, a brawny fellow much like Anthony Quinn's Gauguin, who
reminisces with him about their days as passionate students in love with their
craft, reliving lost moments even as the one Antonio tries to capture eludes
him.
While López is losing his battle for the light, Erice is winning his.
With minimal elements -- the painter, the tree, the canvas, a handful of
visitors, and a radio providing classical music and reports on the Gulf War --
he weaves together a sumptuous tapestry. As in his masterpiece, The Spirit
of the Beehive, Erice taps into the nature of obsession and purity and
transforms it into a dream of light.
-- Peter Keough
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