{"id":37051,"date":"2025-05-16T08:59:19","date_gmt":"2025-05-16T06:59:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/?p=37051"},"modified":"2025-05-16T12:15:07","modified_gmt":"2025-05-16T10:15:07","slug":"contretemps-a-bold-film-on-lebanons-crises","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/contretemps-a-bold-film-on-lebanons-crises\/","title":{"rendered":"<em>Contretemps<\/em>, a Bold Film on Lebanon&#8217;s Crises"},"content":{"rendered":"<h5>Ghassan Salhab documented Lebanon\u2019s 2019-20 protest movement while participating in it. With <em>Contretemps<\/em>, he presents an immersive study of the raucous collective agency of youth, the silent isolation of mortality, and resistance. <em>Contretemps<\/em> had its world premiere in Marseille in April at FID Marseilles.\u00a0It has yet to have a formal projection in Lebanon, but rumor has it there will be screenings soon at Concordia University in Montreal.<\/h5>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h4>Jim Quilty<\/h4>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>[Beirut] How does it feel to participate in a mass civil uprising? What is the sound of popular protest depleted by pandemic and penury? When personal loss compounds the hollowing out of the public sphere, how does the world look? These are among the questions Ghassan Salhab addresses in his 2024 film <em>C<\/em><em>ontretemps<\/em> (\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0647\u0627\u0631 \u0647\u0648 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u064a\u0644, <em>Day is Night<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p>A small library of Lebanese films surfaced in the wake of the photogenic protest movement that ignited in late 2019 and the cascade of outrages that followed. Though he released a pair of feature-length films in this period (the 2019 nonfiction <em>Warda<\/em> and the fiction <em>The River<\/em>, in 2021), Salhab had refrained from contributing a major work to this current. The filmmaker was active in the 2019 protests and underwent the stultifying objectification of the financial collapse, Covid-19 pandemic, port blast, economic and political stagnation and, most recently, war. Salhab\u2019s video documentation of this journey (his \u201clogbook\u201d) are <em>Contretemps<\/em>\u2019 rushes.<\/p>\n<p>His film is unlike other post-2019 nonfiction titles \u2014 Mai Masri\u2019s 2021 <em>Beirut in the Eye of the Storm<\/em>, say, or Myriam El Hajj\u2019s 2024 <em>Diaries from Lebanon<\/em> \u2014 in which the filmmakers cast clusters of protagonists to illustrate the impact of the country\u2019s crises, and relate their stories within two hours. <em>Contretemps<\/em> renders the bipolarities of the 2019-2023 period as slow cinema. Over nearly six hours the film is awash with humanity but without a discernible protagonist other than the citizenry, waxing and waning in the frame with the country\u2019s changing political and climactic seasons. The filmmaker appears for only a few seconds in the final half hour of the work, though his sensibility is evident throughout \u2014 in the film\u2019s themes, its lyricism and his struggle to maintain aesthetic equilibrium when loss at home magnifies that of the flagging popular struggle.<\/p>\n<p>While the first half of <em>Contretemps<\/em> focuses on the public sphere (demonstrations, quotidian moments, urban and rural tableaux) the film later oscillates between (sometimes emptied) sites of activism and snatches of Salhab\u2019s private life. The camera may glance at the pages of the filmmaker\u2019s journals and he can be heard briefly, notably in a <a href=\"https:\/\/lundi.am\/ces-heures-la\u0300\">poem<\/a> (translated into Arabic and read in voiceover by filmmaker Bassem Fayad) based on his phone call with a colleague in Bethlehem. The most intimate moments involve his mother and father.<\/p>\n<p>The payoff for audiences will vary with the viewer\u2019s temperament. Those used to communication by soundbite may need some time to acclimatize to the film\u2019s pacing<strong><em>.<\/em><\/strong> Engaged and patient filmgoers \u2014 those excited by Bela Tarr\u2019s <em>Satantango<\/em>, for instance \u2014 may find <em>Contretemps<\/em> an absorbing and immersive experience.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h4>A Lebanese arthouse filmmaker<\/h4>\n<p>Salhab\u2019s contemporaries, friends and colleagues include filmmakers and contemporary artists that critics and journalists have corralled as \u201cLebanon\u2019s \u201990s generation.\u201d Influenced by European arthouse aesthetics and rooted in the Lebanese narrative, Salhab\u2019s work is not mainstream cinema. Respected for the rigor of his language, his work is more likely to be appreciated by critics than multiplex audiences, who may find its demands exasperating.<\/p>\n<p>When discussing his past work, Salhab has tended to privilege his fictions, consisting of eight feature-length films. His 1998 debut, <em>Phantom Beirut<\/em>, is a genre hybrid. A fiction film about a former fighter\u2019s return to Beirut during a lull in the country\u2019s civil war is interspersed with doc-style interviews with artists who grew up during the conflict. He is also known for his trilogy of films that take their titles from the country\u2019s landscape features \u2014 <em>The Mountain<\/em>, 2010, <em>The Valley<\/em>, 2014, and <em>The River<\/em>. In <em>The Last Man<\/em>, 2006, the protagonist finds himself transforming into something that is anathema to him. Salhab\u2019s first and only turn at the vampire genre, <em>The Last Man<\/em> is notable both for taking up a theme that has resonated through the country\u2019s post-civil war contemporary art and for being among his most accessible feature to date.<\/p>\n<p>The filmmaker\u2019s other works are more essayistic. Ranging from shorts to feature-length nonfictions, they tend toward the experimental. Some are self-produced no-budget efforts, like the 2005 solo project <em>Br\u00e8ve rencontre avec Jean Luc Godard (ou le cin\u00e9ma comme m\u00e9taphore)<\/em>, while others are crewed productions like <em>1958,<\/em> 2009, and <em>Warda.<\/em> <em>Contretemps<\/em> follows from Salhab\u2019s essays inasmuch as it is basically a solo project \u2014 the footage shot, sound recorded and edited by himself. The film credits list six colleagues whom Salhab says assisted in the production.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><br \/>\n<\/strong>An impressionistic calendar<\/h4>\n<p><em>C<\/em><em>ontretemps<\/em>\u2019 want of characters and documentary-style signposting, voiceover narration for instance, can give the film an impressionistic air, but it is not structurally complex. It is a timepiece beginning in 2019, when the filmmaker returns home early from overseas after learning that people were on the street demanding root-and-branch change. It ends in 2023, with the sound of air strikes resonating from the country\u2019s southern border. Intertitles note shifts in temporal location (October 12, 2019, August 8, 2020) or provide thematic commentary (\u201cin the beginning,\u201d or \u201cthe final chant?\u201d).<\/p>\n<p>Landscape motifs provide counterpoint to the years-long stream of events and minor key incidents. The camera periodically falls upon upland rural locations, where the stillness is pierced by the metallic clangor and bleating of sheep grazing on hillsides. More prominent are three or four <em>Rear Window<\/em>-style panoramas of Ras Beirut. The most persistent was shot from a north-facing window or balcony, showing a portrait-shaped sliver of Mediterranean sea and sky sandwiched between a pair of tower blocks. Cargo ships move back and forth through the frame. As the film circles back to these vistas, they provide lyrical studies of light \u2014 as refracted through the city\u2019s capricious weather and air quality \u2014 darkness \u2014 significant as nighttime was much darker early in the financial collapse, when electricity was rare, and because of the filmmaker\u2019s nocturnal wakefulness \u2014 and sound \u2014 unobstructed silence; a call to prayer, conspicuously free of competition; roaring sirens; a solitary voice crying \u201cOh god! Oh lord!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Sound is a key part of Salhab\u2019s language. It opens with a shot of Lebanese kids, domestic help and parents on a rocky beach. The scene is silent. When the soundtrack arises, it is disconnected from the footage, apparently documenting an interior dining sequence, animated by the voices of children and adults. After the title fades in and out, the scene cuts to an interior shot of a moving car, lens angled up to capture the canopy of roadside trees, with superimposition lending it an aspect of collage. As voices scratch the air from the radio, the opening lines of the revolutionary anthem \u201cThe Internationale\u201d rise from a male voice, first humming then lightly singing \u2014 Arise ye prisoners of starvation\/ Arise ye wretched of the earth \u2026 \u2014 the first of many songs and chants to resonate through the film.<\/p>\n<p>Only then does the scene cut to Beirut\u2019s Martyrs\u2019 Square, in the midst of being transformed into an improvised campground after the 2019 demonstrations began on Oct 17. Sirens accompany the swirl of civilians, helmeted police with riot shields and batons, journalists and soldiers moving through the area. \u201cComing from the airport, the roads were empty,\u201d read the subtitles. \u201cIt is because of the latest events, said the taxi driver. I had heard this word, events, for the first time in April of 1975\u201d \u2014 the start of Lebanon\u2019s civil war.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the first half of <em>Contretemps<\/em> is devoted to protest demonstrations and marches at various locations in Beirut, as well as Trablous and the South. Different sequences are sometimes superimposed, perhaps suggesting the onlooker\u2019s fatigue. One march is filmed, full face, as it approaches Downtown from Ras Beirut. The protestors are then shown in profile as they move past, then from behind as they chant their way into the tunnel of a motorway. Throughout, demonstrators sing protest songs against the political class and its enablers \u2014 extemporized on-site by whoever\u2019s holding the megaphone, sometimes performed by professional musicians or rapped after nightfall by local hip-hop artists. The first improvised protest song the film shows, apparently prompted by then-Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri\u2019s resignation, is set to the tune of a children\u2019s song. The street chants Salhab captures do not necessarily evoke the music-box cadences of nursery school, but all resonate with an energy and optimism that are characteristically youthful, regardless how old the demonstrators.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<figure id=\"attachment_37081\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-37081\" style=\"width: 1000px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-37081\" src=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/Sit-in-Jisr-Fuad-Shihab.jpg\" alt=\"Sit-in Jisr Fuad Shihab: A still from Contretemps, showing protestors holding a sit-in at the east end of Downtown Beirut\u2019s &quot;Ring&quot; flyover. (courtesy Ghassan Salhab).\" width=\"1000\" height=\"562\" srcset=\"https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/Sit-in-Jisr-Fuad-Shihab.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/Sit-in-Jisr-Fuad-Shihab-300x169.jpg 300w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/Sit-in-Jisr-Fuad-Shihab-768x432.jpg 768w, https:\/\/themarkaz.org\/oldsite\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/Sit-in-Jisr-Fuad-Shihab-600x337.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-37081\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Sit-in Jisr Fuad Shihab: A still from <em>Contretemps<\/em>, showing protestors holding a sit-in at the east end of Downtown Beirut\u2019s &#8220;Ring&#8221; flyover. (courtesy Ghassan Salhab).<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<hr \/>\n<p>\u201cCome on Beirut,\u201d exultant voices shout early in the film. \u201cRise up!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Arise, ye wretched of the earth.<\/p>\n<p>Locations and tone shift with the movement\u2019s fortunes. A little over an hour in, the time of marching and singing is overtaken by a phase of fleeing and stone-throwing, as security forces turn to teargas and water cannon. The streets again briefly resonate with chants before being subsumed by the silence of pandemic lockdown. Where people might pound on pots and pans from balconies in support of the protestors, they later performed to breach the enforced stillness. Individuals are seen \u2014 dribbling a football on the roof of an adjacent building, feeding street cats from behind a Covid face shield. Sometime between March and May 2020, Salhab\u2019s camera captures a tableau of clouds moving over the face of the moon, accompanied by a shaykh\u2019s sermon resonating from a mosque\u2019s PA system and the persistent whine of an Israeli surveillance drone. As silence and stillness displace chanting and song as nighttime\u2019s principal accompaniment, the drones become a more frequent acoustic presence.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Contretemps<\/em> is an unusually daring film, not because it shows previously undisclosed scenes of Lebanon\u2019s crises but because of its rigorous cinematic language. It documents the fragility of the creative act itself.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h4>Endings<\/h4>\n<p>During two periods of relative quiet, the filmmaker is staggered by trauma unconnected to the protests and the crises that metastasized alongside them. A little over three hours into the film, a nocturnal sonata of kitchenware and ululation cuts to a silent interior shot of a piece of black-and-white wall art with African motifs. A man\u2019s voice can be heard asking something of Ghassan and the image drops to black before cutting to an elderly gent in spectacles framed by a doorway. As the scene drops back to black, the younger man replies from off-frame, pauses, then asks, \u201cWhere\u2019s mom?\u201d With this, <em>Contretemps<\/em> pivots to peer into Salhab\u2019s private life. The film\u2019s second half is suffused with loss \u2014 with the exhausted protest movement providing somber accompaniment to his parents\u2019 deaths.<\/p>\n<p>Salhab\u2019s mother holds a significant place in his nonfiction work <em>1958<\/em>, and <em>Contretemps<\/em> reprises a photo from that earlier film, showing the young mother and her first-born as a little boy. Salhab\u2019s reflections upon her passing are strikingly anecdotal, related via subtitles upon a black screen accompanied by the nocturnal sounds of the city. They touch upon her influence upon his work (particularly <em>The Last Man<\/em>), how he\u2019d shown her footage of the Beirut demonstrations during her final days, how a neurodegenerative disease had left her unrecognizable, and the alienating rituals that accompanied her burial.<\/p>\n<p>After documenting his mother\u2019s departure, Salhab\u2019s treatment of the Beirut port blast, and its aftermath, is measured. The massive plume of pink smoke that rose over the city before the explosion is shown, as the voices of Salhab and another man are overheard speculating about its cause. The blast itself is neither shown nor heard. Neither is the fierce melee of tear gas and rubber bullets, smashed concrete and fireworks that followed. The scene cuts to a montage of blast wreckage, bewilderment, and a few spaces that had hosted protests and the tents of the movement\u2019s organizers, contained, emptied, silenced.<\/p>\n<p>Salhab uses intertitles to signal his father\u2019s passing too \u2014 \u201cWhy did he leave before me? he asked\u201d \u2014 and these reflections too are anecdotal, but his representation of Abu Ghassan\u2019s absence is more cinematic. Flanked by wild seaside foliage, the filmmaker walks the camera down a path leading to one of few undeveloped (not privatized) strips of the Beirut coast. His father was among the men who frequented this area \u2014 as amusingly documented by Lebanese artist Mounira Al Solh in her 2007 series <em>Sea Is a Stereo<\/em>. \u201cEveryone knows Abu Ghassan here,\u201d the intertitles observe, \u201cthe fishermen, the swimmers, the divers, the loafers, all the regulars. So I\u2019m a bit of a curiosity. His son.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The camera finds a couple of small boats, overturned amid the weeds.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhy only now?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The film cuts to an interior shot showing Abu Ghassan\u2019s glasses on a tabletop, with the sea visible in the background. A few minutes later, the film reprises some footage of a line of Arabic graffiti on a Beirut wall \u2014 \u201cWe now belong to the loss.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The camera seems to seek a note of optimism with which to close, but sorrow imbues the landscape. In August 2021, the frame opens upon the world premiere of Salhab\u2019s <em>The River<\/em> at the Locarno film festival, \u201c2634.1kms from <em>here,<\/em>\u201d as the intertitle notes, followed by the joyless remark, \u201cCinema is back, they claim.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Sometime later, a jolly oud tune rises from the black screen, which cuts to a couple of fellows on a sidewalk singing an upbeat song on estrangement. \u201cIf you have loved me and forgot about me, Left me on my own, Just send me a letter, Tell me you are well.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The vignette is juxtaposed with an image of the remains of a songbird in the dirt.<\/p>\n<p>About 15 minutes before the closing credits, the unsmiling Salhab appears in the frame. The ensuing intertitle, \u201cYes I know you\u2019re unhappy,\u201d precedes a rear-window tableau showing the roof of a residential building where someone\u2019s dropped a small excavator. Its clawed shovel has been replaced by a jackhammer, with which the operator is assaulting a rooftop structure. Upon the doomed wall, someone had spray-painted a heart and the phrase \u2018\u0628\u062d\u0628\u0643\u2019 (I love you).<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps Salhab found some absurd comedy in this scene. In the tracking shot that follows, filming the seaside from a moving vehicle, a bloated sun hangs low in the sky, shining with an unnatural intensity, exploding through any roadside obstacle passing between it and the lens. The sequence is accompanied by an unremittingly sparkling Tindersticks tune. Its lyrics acknowledge the shitty state of things \u2014 \u201cYes I know you\u2019re unhappy. Yes I know you\u2019ve been cryin\u2019. I been crying too\u201d \u2014 while insisting that there is only one way forward: \u201cYou have to scream <em>louder<\/em>.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The film closes on November 12, 2023, with a black screen, the sound of shelling and surveillance drones.<\/p>\n<p>Like the period it captures, <em>Contretemps<\/em> is a mutable piece of work. Its documentation of the demonstrations of 2019-20 unfolds as a study of the culture of youthful engagement with politics in the public sphere, one that wields an accomplished cinematic language of movement and stasis, sound and silence. This language also proves adept in capturing the inversion of political agency \u2014 the pandemic\u2019s becalmed enclosure and the enforced silence of a public sphere depleted by exhaustion (and perhaps fragmentation, whether by financial ruin, emigration, or varying positions of hostility to and dependence on the status quo).<\/p>\n<p><em>Contretemps<\/em> is an unusually daring film, not because it shows previously undisclosed scenes of Lebanon\u2019s crises but because of its rigorous cinematic language. As it reorients itself, from scrutinizing youthful collective action to documenting mortality and the isolation of grief, it puts severe strains on this aesthetic. It documents the fragility of the creative act itself.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Filmmaker Ghassan Salhab presents an immersive study of Lebanese youth, the silent isolation of mortality, and resistance.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":868,"featured_media":37078,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,17,18,51],"tags":[323,4435,2441,4434,1464,1784],"coauthors":[4257],"class_list":["post-37051","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-beirut","category-film","category-film-review","category-tmr-weekly","tag-beirut","tag-lebanese-filmmakers","tag-october-2019-revolution","tag-port-blast","tag-resistance","tag-war","entry"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.8 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - 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