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East Punk Memories

Lucile Chaufour
2012 France 80 minutes English; Hungarian

“Communist drug/I don’t need you!”. Over twenty years ago, Lucile Chaufour filmed Hungarian teenagers in the punk movement. At that time, an Iroquois haircut or holey jeans would lead to tangles with the police. Back in Budapest, the musician filmmaker traced and interviewed some of them individually, stimulating their anamnesis with photos or films. “I don’t recognise myself…”: the sentence that opens many of these conversations lends a certain ambivalence to the relationship that these quadragenarians have with a past that seems much further back than the 1980s. “It was… another planet”, concludes one of them. This is borne out by astonishing views of the tourist park where the Communist statues now stand assembled. In the widening gulf between the evocation of a rebel youth (forcibly anti-Communist) and, in the second part of the film, reflections on post-1989, the dissonant words of the former punks reflect a political awareness in shreds. Fear of extremist nationalism, fear of globalisation: the disorientation of these new Europeans is clearly a little like our own…

Lucile Chaufour

Lucile Chaufour participe dans les années 90 au développement de la
télévision interne de la Maison d’Arrêt de la Santé et anime un atelier vidéo
dans un hôpital psychiatrique parisien. Elle crée le label musical Makhno
Records qui permet à plusieurs groupes punk-rock interdits en ex-république
socialiste de Hongrie de diffuser leur musique. En 2008, son premier
court-métrage L’Amertume du chocolat fait partie de la programmation
de l’ACID au Festival de Cannes. En 2009, Violent Days, Grand Prix
du long métrage français au festival EntreVues de Belfort, est sorti en salle.

Production :
Supersonicglide
Editing :
Lucile Chaufour
Sound :
Lucile Chaufour; Bernhard Braunstein
Photography :
Lucile Chaufour; Bernhard Braunstein
Copy Contact :
Supersonicglide

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