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Languages: Français
Subtitles: Deutsch English
Le souffle du désert (Desert Wind)
CH 2005 80'
Director: François Kohler
Script: François Kohler
Camera: Denis Jutzeler, Camille Cottagnoud
Sound: Eric Ghersinu
Editing: Hélène Girard
Music: Anthony Rozankovic
Production: XL Production, Heinz Dill, Xavier Grin
See also:
Das Schweigen der Männer
Keywords
Gesellschaft
Wüste
Hitparade
Männer
Dokumentarfilm
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Le souffle du désert
Des hommes en quête de sens
François Kohler
Desert Wind
Thirteen men, total strangers from different countries and walks of life, have gathered at the edge of the Sahara for a physical and emotional adventure: a 15-day trek, a chance to rethink their lives and their male identity. Inspired by the desert, they share their anxieties, some of them taboo, all of them of universal interest, in moments of intimacy so intense they can be unsettling.
The resulting film makes a clean sweep of clichés about what it means to be a man. Desert Wind exposes the participants’ innermost thoughts about their families, their roles as fathers, their relations with women, starting with their mothers, their sexuality. They reveal what they really think about power, aggressiveness, fear, performance.
The film is also for women, as it gives them a glimpse of the hidden side that few men spontaneously reveal.
"Says one: "Each of us is here to encounter himself in the solitude of unlimited space and the company of other men". They sit around a fire and announce things they like ("dipping choccolate in my coffee in a cafe") and dislike ("men who shave only on workdays and not on the weekend for their families and wives"). One pens a critical letter to Mom:"You made me see male sexuality as brutal, savage, forced and wicked." Others stand naked and talk about their sex lives. Most seem better off as a result of their group therapy.
Written and directed by François Kohler, DESERT WIND will be of interest of man - and especially to women, who might learn much they didn't know about opposite sex."
V.A. Musetto, New York Post
"The climax of the film involves all of the men making promises, shouting them out into the vast space of the desert. It's a cathartic moment, and the hope is that after this metaphysical trek everyone will have learned a little something more about the nuances of existence. Certainly European audiences who've already seen the film are responding enthusiastically."
BBC World Film Focus
"Mr. Kohler's conception of the desert trek as a way to break down rigid psychic barriers between men was undercut by the fact that those who chose (and, presumably, paid) to go on this trip are a self-selected group. They seem open to a level of vulnerability and introspection that might make many guys squirm. On the first night of introductions around the campfire, one man says, "I like dancing, singing and sharing," while another confesses his love for dipping chocolate in his coffee. As the rigors of the trek become more grueling, the revelations grow more intimate. In the funniest scene, the men take turns stripping naked and talking about their bodies. "I like my body upside down, too," one says, standing on his head. Though it generates its share of unintentional giggles, DESERT WIND does manage to take us to a seldom-visited place: the hidden corners of the straight male mind."
Dana Stevens, New York Times
"Far from encouraging "Survivor"-style competitiveness, the desert setting serves as a serene Club Med-type backdrop to the all-male bonding. The men, however, are careful to qualify their feelings as emphatically heterosexual. Yet the prescribed focus of the exercises and the "how are you feeling now?" quality of facilitator Alexis Burger's interventions narrowly circumscribe whatever "breakthroughs" the men may experience. The tribe's unfailing politeness outside of activities specifically designed to arouse testosterone underlines the suspiciously benign nature of the entire endeavor."
Ronnie Scheib, Variety
"Nicely rendered moments of casual intimacy between the men (we see one rinsing shampoo from another's scalp) attest to the trip's therapeutic value, but very little of it transfers to the audience. The dull large-group scenes consist mostly of old standbys like writing problems on slips of paper and burning them (followed here by Burger's dubious exhortation to "thank the fire"). The major exception arrives near the end, when the men take turns standing nude in front of the group and talking frankly about their bodies."
Joshua Land, Village Voice
"This is the story of a quest. The story of thirteen
men with different pursuits, and at different
stages of their lives. On the occasion
of a two week trek, they are going off to join
up with the long tradition of anchorites, hermits
and penitent monks who, ever since
humanity existed, choose vast deserted areas
to give themselves over to introspection.
But, sign of the times, isolation is no longer
the done thing and the preoccupations that
have become the lot of men of the 21st century
have somewhat changed. At a time when
the relations between the sexes have been
suddenly turned upside down, it is often difficult
to recover one’s masculine identity. The
men filmed by François Kohler are linked by
the urgent need to explore this facet of their
personality which, paradoxically, they know
very little about, having for a long time denied,
under-exploited or, on the contrary, overestimated
it. While studying the group as a whole,
LE SOUFFFLE DU DESERT: DES HOMMES EN QUÊTE DE SENS invites several men in particular
to express their thoughts: traumatized
by a domineering grandmother, one of them
has difficulty connecting with women. Another
suffers from complexes which paralyse him in
his relations with others. And so on. Little by
little, fatigue, the heat, the lack of hygiene,
combined with the effects of this group therapy,
make these characters undergo an
extraordinary process of psychological striptease.
Affinities begin to form, new perspectives
start to take shape. What emerges is a
disturbing reflection on the changing role of
modern man."
Visions du Réel Nyon 2005
Three questions to the group leader Alexis Burger
Three questions to the group leader
What is masculinity?
« Masculinity is not easy to define. Is there a ‘natural’ masculinity that we can uncover beneath social conditioning? Or does it depend on the historical and cultural context, so that it is reinvented through each new period in human evolution? What if masculinity is really a combination of the two – a bit of both? We can always explore the changing nature of masculinity. It is written into the changing historical and cultural roles tied to the fact of being either male or female. »
How do we approach these changes?
« For our purposes, we must first look carefully at the questions and practical experience coming out of a variety of therapeutic and personal development approaches. This exploration offers an overview of the ways men have been socially conditioned (competition, aggression, conquering sexuality, fear of homosexuality), and then moves on to experiences of greater sensitivity – ones in which our relationships with other men and with our own essential selves as men mutually support each other as they unfold. »
Why did you participate in this film?
« Even though I know nothing about film, I really liked the idea that this kind of work could be filmed and shown. I believe it is very much worth the trouble to show an authentic undertaking that is both creative and deep, and that touches on masculinity while avoiding the standard approaches. »
François Kohler
A tireless jack-of-all-trades, François Kohler has spent close to 20 years writing, directing and producing works for cinema and television. After earning a law degree in 1982 from Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland, he decided that his future lay in filmmaking and enrolled in the Institut National Supérieur des Arts du Spectacle (INSAS), in Brussels.
2008 CHER MONSIEUR, CHER PAPA
2005 LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
2000 LE LAMA ET LA TURQUOISE
1998 LIOBA AU COEUR DES ARMAILLIS
1994 CAP VERT
Internet
- Website LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
- maenner.ch
- Réseau Hommes Suisse Romande
- Website: On a marché sur la Dune, proposé par Alexis Burger
- Visions du Réel Nyon 2005: Fiche LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
- Fréquence Découverte asbl
- Le vilain petit canard: LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT ou les confidences d'homme aujourd'hui
- Variety review LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
- Village Voice review LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
- Cineman Kritik LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
- TSR présentation LE SOUFFLE DU DESERT
- Sélection Visions du Réel Nyon
- Visions du Réel Nyon Fiche du film




