Society without connection
In the third and last part of his documentary trilogy on unsung professions, which he started about 10 years ago, Pavel Cuzuioc, the Vienna-based filmmaker born in Moldova, once again takes us to his roots. In his debut film, he portrayed Gravediggers, in his last film, cloakroom attendants (see also The Unsung sing), and his current film is about workers for telecom providers on the road in Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova and Ukraine.
The film, shown at the Viennale 2020, the Vienna Film Festival, on the eve of the second lockdown, caused unease in my companion and restrained amazement in me. My companion didn’t appreciate having to literally smell the impoverished living conditions of the rural far east of Europe that the field workers were visiting. I was indeed surprised that the transition to mobile phones is only halfway there.
The experimental set-up is similar to his previous film “Secondo Me”. One profession, one subject, several countries. 100 hours of material, evaluated and assembled into a sociological-ethnological film essay of 86 min. And yet the most recent film is completely different. Whereas “Secondo Me” focuses on the comparison of the lives and biographies of three cloakroom assistants at three opera houses, “Please hold the line” documents the commonplace domestic locations more. New technologies and increasing globalisation are no different in Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova and Ukraine, and the telecom customers are also largely the same. They seem to be avoiding touch with the “networked” society or even deliberately rejecting it. However, the landline and the television like in the old days, preferably with the old programmes, must work perfectly.
Unlike within the previous parts of the trilogy, upon comparison in the current film it is clearly not so much the everyday work and life of the service technicians that interest Cuziuoc, but the stories and narratives of the customers. To this end, wonderful small portraits can be found. For example, a priest who philosophises about communication, a father who mourns his son’s death of drug abuse or a pensioner who convincingly presents Kropotkinian anarchism as the solution to current social developments.
But one wonders what does this do for the film and the idea of a trilogy about unsung professions? From an occupational research point of view, it would certainly have been more interesting to see more of the service technicians’ work. It would have been even more exciting to compare the strictly female world of the technical office staff shown only at the beginning of the film and literally holding the line with the apparently exclusively male domain in the field.
The film, which is scheduled for release in March 2021, is well worth seeing, just like the other two films in the trilogy.
References:
https://pavelcuzuioc.com/please-hold-the-line/
PLEASE HOLD THE LINE, Trailer, 2020, Austria, 86 min
Working in a telephone exchange, 1960, Huntley Film Archive
"The World's Switchboard!", Telephone Exchange, London, 1930
Please hold the line, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Please hold the line, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Please hold the line, 2020, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Please hold the line, 2020, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Society without connection
In the third and last part of his documentary trilogy on unsung professions, which he started about 10 years ago, Pavel Cuzuioc, the Vienna-based filmmaker born in Moldova, once again takes us to his roots. In his debut film, he portrayed Gravediggers, in his last film, cloakroom attendants (see also The Unsung sing), and his current film is about workers for telecom providers on the road in Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova and Ukraine.
The film, shown at the Viennale 2020, the Vienna Film Festival, on the eve of the second lockdown, caused unease in my companion and restrained amazement in me. My companion didn’t appreciate having to literally smell the impoverished living conditions of the rural far east of Europe that the field workers were visiting. I was indeed surprised that the transition to mobile phones is only halfway there.
The experimental set-up is similar to his previous film “Secondo Me”. One profession, one subject, several countries. 100 hours of material, evaluated and assembled into a sociological-ethnological film essay of 86 min. And yet the most recent film is completely different. Whereas “Secondo Me” focuses on the comparison of the lives and biographies of three cloakroom assistants at three opera houses, “Please hold the line” documents the commonplace domestic locations more. New technologies and increasing globalisation are no different in Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova and Ukraine, and the telecom customers are also largely the same. They seem to be avoiding touch with the “networked” society or even deliberately rejecting it. However, the landline and the television like in the old days, preferably with the old programmes, must work perfectly.
Unlike within the previous parts of the trilogy, upon comparison in the current film it is clearly not so much the everyday work and life of the service technicians that interest Cuziuoc, but the stories and narratives of the customers. To this end, wonderful small portraits can be found. For example, a priest who philosophises about communication, a father who mourns his son’s death of drug abuse or a pensioner who convincingly presents Kropotkinian anarchism as the solution to current social developments.
But one wonders what does this do for the film and the idea of a trilogy about unsung professions? From an occupational research point of view, it would certainly have been more interesting to see more of the service technicians’ work. It would have been even more exciting to compare the strictly female world of the technical office staff shown only at the beginning of the film and literally holding the line with the apparently exclusively male domain in the field.
The film, which is scheduled for release in March 2021, is well worth seeing, just like the other two films in the trilogy.
References:
https://pavelcuzuioc.com/please-hold-the-line/
PLEASE HOLD THE LINE, Trailer, 2020, Austria, 86 min
Working in a telephone exchange, 1960, Huntley Film Archive
"The World's Switchboard!", Telephone Exchange, London, 1930
Please hold the line, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Please hold the line, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Please hold the line, 2020, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
Please hold the line, 2020, Still
© Pavel Cuzuioc, Filmgarten
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About this blog
By selecting a film or an image, this blog literally illustrates the vast sphere of work, employment & education in an open collection of academic, artistic and also anecdotal findings.
About us
Konrad Wakolbinger makes documentary films about work and life. Jörg Markowitsch does research on education and work. They are both based in Vienna. Information on guest authors can be found in their corresponding articles.
More about
Interested in more? Find recommendations on relevant festivals, film collections and literature here.
About this blog
With picking a film or an image, this blog literally illustrates the vast sphere of work, employment & education in an open collection of academic, artistic and also anecdotal findings.
About us
Konrad Wakolbinger makes documentary films about work and life. Jörg Markowitsch does research on education and work. We both work in Vienna. Information on guest authors can be found in their respective articles.
More about
Interested in more? Find recommendations on relevant festivals, film collections and literature here.