New Film By RPCV Jack Niedenthal (Marshall Island 1981-84)

[Here is a glowing review of Jack Niedenthal’s (Marshall Island 1981-84 ) new film Yokwe Bartowe. The review appears in Film Threat.com.]

 “Are you having problems locating a genuinely original, intriguing and entertaining independent film?  Then set your sights on the Marshall Islands.  Yes, that far-flung corner of the Pacific Rim is home to one of the most remarkable little films to fly in under the proverbial radar Yokwe Bartowe, a no-budget/high-imagination fantasy that can sincerely lay claim to being among the most original cinematic endeavors to emerge in quite some time.

“Yokwe Bartowe involves the interconnected fates of two siblings: the 20-year-old college student Bartowe and his kid sister Lijiamao.  One fine afternoon, Lijiamao disappears while swimming in a lagoon.  It is assumed that she drowned, even though her body is never recovered, and Bartowe – who was supposed to be watching her – is blamed for her death by their parents.  Poor Bartowe’s life falls apart and he become a pathetic alcoholic.

“However, Lijiamao did not die. Instead, she is kidnapped by a demonic bird-spirit that keeps her as a companion.  This is part of the Marshall Islands’ legend of the kwolej bird, which goes through its feathered life creating tragedy for the unsuspecting bipeds who walk beneath its flight.

“Fortunately for Bartowe, he has an unusual ally in Lijimu, an elderly lady who is kept in pariah status because of her alleged witchcraft powers.  Bartowe discovers to his astonishment that Lijimu’s reputation is not entirely based in gossip, and the old gal uses her magic against the kwolej spirit that keeps Lijiamao as a prisoner.

“By U.S. standards, Yokwe Bartowe is not the most sophisticated endeavors.  Directors Jack Niedenthal and Suzanne Chutaro make no effort to hide the bare bones production values, particularly in the mystical elements where young Lijiamao and her kwolej captor wear feathered headdresses and flimsy costumes to suggest an unholy union of avian and human spirits.  And the sequence where Lijimu communicates with her deceased family is more than a bit cheesy, with the recently deceased depicted as hovering together in the dark while weak lights illuminate them from floor level.

“Yet if Yokwe Bartowe fails to score points for polish, it slam dunks with spirit and personality.  Niedenthal and Chutaro guide their nonprofessional cast through a screenplay that is fairly complex with issues relating to spiritualism, guilt, miscreancy, angst and emotional isolation.  If the film is missing the razzmatazz of the CGI-heavy productions from Hollywood, it more than compensates with the raw, visceral power one associates from folk art – it throbs with a genuine sense of emotion and honesty, demanding that its voice be heard and respected.

“Furthermore, the film’s screenplay (written by Niedenthal) is anything but predictable.  The characters are have richly textured personalities, and even secondary roles – including a classmate of Lijiamao who refuses to believe her friend died and a quartet of miscreants who indulge in café-base inebriation by ordering two cans of beers with four cups for sharing the brew – are genuinely memorable in a cult-worthy manner.  And the film’s astonishing denouement – no spoilers here, sorry – happily refuses to accept the standard of a neatly-tied happy ending.

“Hopefully, Yokwe Bartowe will find its way around the world.  This is an extraordinary work that deserves to be seen, and it presents a strong calling card to alert all interested cinematic parties that the Marshall Islands has arrived as a center of memorable film production.”

You can read more about the film at: http://www.microwavefilms.org/

WHAT IS FILM THREAT?

Film Threat began as a college fanzine founded by Chris Gore in Detroit in 1985. As the magazine evolved into a respected national publication, Gore relocated to Los Angeles in 1989. The magazine received national attention for its coverage of cult films, midnight movies, underground shorts before the market even emerged. Film Threat was the first mag to cover people like Quentin Tarantino (Reservoir Dogs). After over a decade of covering cult films, underground shorts, alternative films and independent features, Film Threat the magazine was retired in 1997. But the legend has lived on as an internet journalism mainstay, FilmThreat.com.

Continuing in the tradition set forth by the original print magazine, FilmThreat.com delivers the best in film reviews, film festival coverage, exclusive filmmaker interviews and original video content. From blogs to online forums, FilmThreat.com is on the cutting edge of online journalism, while staying as renegade as ever.

FilmThreat.com was purchased during the Sundance Film Festival from Chris Gore by former Editor-in-Chief Mark Bell in January 2010, on the eve of Film Threat’s 25th Anniversary.

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