"There is nothing that says more about its creator than the work itself"- Akira Kurosawa
The emotional journey of watching Bunohan (2012) as a normal audience
had reinforced me to view the film uncritically; “gila cantik gambar”
(great visual), “power Faizal Hussein berlakon”(great acting), “art deep
sungguh” (artistic). Undeniably, award winning director, Dain Said
managed to challenge me to immerse into the totality of the film
experience and to interpret how that experience was assembled as Bunohan
was beautifully constructed of visual, aural, and linguistic components
that were strangely manipulated in unique ways.
As film has been
the powerful medium to communicate and transfer messages, visual
communications in Dain’s works signifies the transmission of information
and ideas using symbols and imagery along with verbal communication and
non-verbal communication. For example, the study of semiotics and
semantics of symbols and visual communications in Bunohan and
Interchange could be either straightforward or complicated for Malaysian
audiences as it is highly associated with their social and cultural
background.
Decoding, interpreting and comprehending
communication styles used by Dain Said in these two films is very
essential as it helps the audiences to understand the films' cinematic
structures. Thus, let us study the basic simple premise of Bunohan
(2012), starring Faizal Hussein, Pekin Ibrahim, Zahiril Adzhim and Wan
Hanafi Su that revolves the story of how three brothers, each with a
murderous profession, flee their home country and family only to find
themselves back together in the titular small border town where they are
forced to deal with their pasts; depicting on familial connection,
brotherhood and corruption of society in tackling fame and wealth.
Interchange (2016) stars Iedil Putra, Shaheizy Sam, Nadiya
Nissa,Nicholas Saputra and Prisia Nasution, on the other hand tells
about the forensics photographer Adam who is dragged into investigating a
series of macabre ritual murders in the city by his best friend
Detective Man and Adam then befriends Iva who is on a mission to rescue
souls of the people in her tribe who have been trapped inside a glass
plate negative.
I personally believe despite being avant-garde
surrealist filmmaker who remains intent on subverting the local
conventional filmmaking and exploring the realms of his cinematic
capability, Dain Said, pertinently has also been standing as social and
cultural anthropologists of visual communication; studying and telling
the norms and values of societies and providing highly coded and
selective information about the social lives of the local focused
community or subjects.
●Space and Proximity
Bunohan and
Interchange share Dain’s reflection on “proxemics” which is the use of
space by the characters and how that affects the behaviour,
communication, and social interaction of them. This is one of important
elements of visual communication in a film that motivates the audience
to understand the emotional impact portrayed by the characters via their
personal territory including level of haptics (touch), kinesics (body
movement), vocalics (paralanguage), and chronemics (structure of time).
In Bunohan, the three estranged brothers, Adil, Bakar and Ilham and
their ailing father are separated in the “public space” of their village
but interconnected “personally” after tragic incidents. Despite staying
with his son, Bakar, Pok Eng emotionally struggles to reserve his
personal space and avoid building intimate space with Bakar and Adil.
Dain’s brilliant narrative in showing the human space used in this
father-sons relationship gradually brought audiences into the
development of the characters.
Carrying noir-fantasy thriller,
Interchange somehow represents tactical dimension of space and
proximity. The audience must be able to deeply engage on how
interpersonal distances of characters, the organization of space as
territories and the cultural factors related to proxemics portrayed
within Man-Adam, Adam-Iva, Belian-Iva, Belian-Man and Belian-Sani
relationships as it varies from one another. In the public space of
Metro city, these characters strongly stand in their own personal space
and develop towards special intimate space when they are emotionally and
spiritually connected.
As communication reflects the process of
reciprocal interaction in understanding messages between sender and
receiver, we could also analyze the space codes used in Interchange
within the supernatural and mystical dimensions. How Adam and Iva using
their virtual connection can be explained from Previc's Neuropsychology
of 3D Space focusing on extrapersonal space; the space that occurs
outside the reach of an individual. Beyond logic, audience must be
convinced on the spiritual connection of Adam who can deeply immerse and
embrace into the mystical spectrum of Iva and the tribe. This strong
interpersonal connection within the extrapersonal space reflects the
emotional journey of these two characters.
Aptly, it is a
cognitive learning process for the audience to be highly associated with
Dain’s aesthetics approach in visualizing his bold artistic vision -
confidently conjuring a world of magical shape-shifting shamans and
mystical beings within the urban landscape.
●Semiotics of Acting
Let us analyze the amazingly dramatic performances of Faizal Hussein,
Pekin Ibrahim, Zahiril Adzhim and Wan Hanafi Su crafted by Dain Said in
Bunohan; portraying the semiotics of acting. As Bunohan communicates
with the audience with subtext, symbols, metaphors and signs, the actors
heavily required to project dimension of significant and meaningful
performances. Thus, it is highly important for the audiences to decode
transmitted signs by the actors as stressed by semiotican, Felix
Guattari.
Mysterious, naturalist and minimalist types of acting
portrayed by the characters dealing with dark personality traits in
Bunohan is beyond magic as they had to implicitly express anger, love,
pain and struggle within their limited interpersonal communication
context. Therefore, the elements of semiotics of acting include the
actor's body language, gestures, facial expressions, intonation, eye
contact, postures and other vocal qualities crafted by Dain in Bunohan
could link the audiences to the emotional journey of each and every
character.
Interchange interestingly demands Shaheizy Sam
(Detective Man), Iedil Putra (Adam), Prisia Nasution (Iva), Nicholas
Saputra (Belian) and Nadiya Nissa (Sani) to deliver semiotic codes and
cues as introvert characters psychologically and spiritually. I could
feel how Detective Man (Shaheizy Sam) had to use his persuasive and
assertive non verbal gestures and postures in showing his referent power
to Adam at the workplace and intimately as a caring friend. In fact,
just analyze the variation of oculesics skills (eye contact) used by
Sani (Nadiya Nissa) to express her assertiveness, avoidance, interest
and refusal in transmitting codes and messages to different characters
in this movie. Monotonous tone of voice by Iva (Prisia Nasution) has
indeed become her special instrument to convey hidden messages to Adam
as she is highly reserved and private. This example of paralinguistic
codes (relying on vocal cues) in Interchange is very essential as the
characters come from different walks of cultural and social background
which they need to communicate beyond human language.
Undeniably,
Dain had to define, visualize and measure their traits as well as
habitual patterns of behavior, thought, and emotions as illustrated by
semiotician, Patrice Pavis:
“Any acting is based on a codified
system (even if the audience does not see it as such) of behaviour and
actions that are considered to be believable and realistic or artificial
and theatrical. To advocate the natural, the spontaneous, and the
instinctive is only to attempt to produce natural effects, governed by
an ideological code that determines, at a particular historical time,
and for a given audience, what is natural and believable and what is
declamatory and theatrical”
The ability of audience to explore
the semiotic of acting portrayed in Bunohan and Interchange nevertheless
driven by their level of exposure to visual adaptation,
interpretational awareness and cinematic techniques. The positive
reinforcement (perceptual, cognitive and emotional processes) of
watching Bunohan as first hand experience could drive and educate the
audience to embrace the similar cognitive states while watching
Interchange although they both carried different styles.
●Cinematic Storytelling: Visual Metaphors
It has been an amazing journey and learning experience watching Bunohan
and Interchange as both signifies Dain’s solid signature in crafting a
unique language of metaphors and symbols as a visual storyteller. His
both films positively reinforced audience to comprehend and interpret
abstract concepts which hardly translated into words.
Thus, the
communication process takes place when the audiences decode and give
meanings to series of visual metaphors and symbols mapped out and
established in Bunohan by Charin Pengpanich’s expressive cinematography;
capturing the mythical and mysterious elements of rural countryside in
Kelantan. Dain’s cinematic storytelling was manifested and beautifully
presented with a set of visual images embedded under the additional
layer of metaphoric meanings of magical sequences of a talking bird, a
ghost-woman in the shape of crocodile, and a possessed boy.
Besides, the dynamic metaphor of kelir wayang kulit and kerambit used by Ilham clearly established the spectrum of struggle and hope in dealing with obstacles and hurdles.
In Interchange, the visual metaphors
used required a specific contextual understanding in order to decode and
appreciate the messages. As a dark fantasy noir, it has given me the
cinematic experience in creating, organizing and constructing all the
metaphorical signs conveyed by Dain Said. The reflection of drenched
streets, flowing river, feathers of hornbill, or even the glass negative
captured visually by Jordan Chiam carry an implied meaning in the
journey of non-linear narrative.
●Symbolic Interactionism
Communicative experience in Bunohan and Interchange has also been
shaped with Dain’s injection of symbolic interactionism as the basis of
human communication. As this communication theory strongly believes that
society and individuals are created based upon the interactions between
each other with the ongoing use of language and gestures in
anticipation of how the other will react, all the characters in Bunohan
and Interchange driven and shaped by their human communication and
interaction.
In Bunohan, the political, social and cultural
context of the society strongly influence Ilham, Adil and Bakar to
define their understanding of lives or based on power, dignity and
struggle. How wealth, power and authority being defined in Bunohan carry
the dominant masculine traits include courage, independence and
assertiveness. The way Bakar interacts with his father using his
diplomatic communication skills is pretty different from Adil who opts
for persuasive styles in getting definite explanations of his
background. Indeed, these traits vary by location and context, and are
influenced by their social and cultural background respectively; Adil,
the kickboxer, who was more or less kidnapped in the middle of a bout in
Thailand; his half-brother Bakar, who has been living in the city and
hopes to sell the family's land to resort developers; and a professional
killer named Ilham, hired to kill Adil but also finding it necessary to
redress family grievances.
Symbolic interactionism in
Interchange is heavily reflected by language, symbols and images of both
supernatural and reality world. As Sani, Iva and Belian undergo the
process of identity exploration in the contemporary cultural and social
settings, Adam and Man in contrast, assigned to understand and
communicate with huge range of cultural symbols and ethnic identity of
Tingang tribe while searching clues of unsolved murder cases. This
association shapes how the characters communicate as collective entity
and build perceptual and cognitive process of one another. Man becomes
more heedful towards Belian and Sani as he interprets all the
communication codes from the perspective of a detective while Adam
progressively builds empathy towards Iva and her mystical journey as he
could relate all the codes and cues with his personal experience.
In conclusion, Dain Said has brilliantly applied and infused
distinctive communication styles in his two acclaimed movies; Bunohan
and Interchange. Visual, verbal and non verbal communication styles in
those movies could be explicitly and implicitly manifested through some
areas namely proxemics, semiotics of acting, visual metaphors and
symbolic interactionism. The exciting journey of understanding Bunohan
and Interchange from communication spectrum can bridge us to understand
different perspective of this award winning filmmaker.
“I wanted to come home and tell Malaysian stories,”-Dain Said
By : Ahmad Syazli Muhd Khiar
syazli@finas.my
syazli@finas.my
**Writer is the Director of Corporate Communication FINAS
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