FESTIVAL: UNFINISHED SYMPHONIES
Midnight Traveler
here’s a moment in filmmaker Hassan Fazili’s moving documentary Midnight Traveler, in which his young daughter looks into the camera, giggles and says that she’s bored. She then takes out her phone, searches for Michael Jackson’s They Don’t Care About Us on a video streaming platform, and passionately starts to dance along to the music. A title card tells us that it’s Day 189 and that they, Hassan Fazili with his fellow filmmaker wife Fatima and two children, Nargis and Zahra, are in Krnjaca Camp in Serbia, six months after having fled the Taliban in Afghanistan.
In 2015, after his documentary profile of former Taliban commander Mullah Tur Jan aired on Afghan television, the Taliban put out a hit on Fazili. It was at that point that he took the decision of fleeing to Europe. Being a filmmaker, his natural instinct was to document the difficult journey that lay ahead of him with the help of three Samsung smart phones.
The film has an incredible workflow: since he needed to be constantly mobile and on the go, Fazili couldn’t carry around heavy equipment. So he only worked with a stack of SD-cards and in each country that he’d end up in, he would find contacts that would copy the footage for him, back it up on a hard-drive and then ship the contents to his producers in America, who were on-board with the project from the start. Fazili would then wipe the cards and keep shooting, as would his wife and daughters, who are all credited as the film’s camera operators.
Two Afghan filmmakers’ documentary films screened at the Berlin Film Festival are linked together by their unique approaches to storytelling and how they are both essentially about film editing
The documentary, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and then played in the “Panorama” section at the Berlin Film Festival, is a raw, emotional and, above all, hands-on portrait of what it means to flee one’s homeland, and coming to terms with it. After the Berlin premiere, Fazili sits down with me and told me about the process: “We were living in circumstances where we couldn’t plan what to shoot in the future. We had to have our phones ready at all times, because if something started to happen, we would have to shoot immediately. We were trying to capture us as a family and our hopes, our fears and our dreams.”