NMR | A relentless look at racism





For the holidays, Matthias is reunited with his son Rudi, his elderly father Otto and his native village of Transylvania, Romania, after quitting his job in Germany. He tries to win back his former girlfriend, Csilla, who decides to recruit foreign employees in the factory she runs. This upsets the village and frustrations, anxieties and conflicts break out.



“Given the state of the world, I think we all need a brain scan,” said Romanian filmmaker Cristian Mungiu, in explaining the intriguing title of his new film, NMR (for “nuclear magnetic resonance”).

Matthias, a gruff and obtuse man who went into exile in Germany to find work, returns to his native, multi-ethnic village in Transylvania. His father, Otto, is unwell and his 8-year-old son, Rudi, hasn’t spoken since he suddenly got irrationally frightened in the forest on his way to school.

When the bread factory managed by Matthias’ ex-girlfriend, Csilla, decides to recruit employees from Sri Lanka, for lack of local manpower, the villagers rise up to demand that these workers be immediately fired. in their country. “We have nothing against them, they say in chorus, but we prefer them at home!” “, they say during a long sequence shot of nearly 20 minutes, during a meeting which turns into the people’s court.


PHOTO PROVIDED BY MOBRA FILMS

scene of NMR

It is this uninhibited xenophobic discourse, fueled by the far-right nationalism that has invaded Europe in recent years, that Cristian Mungiu is interested in in this social, economic and political drama, inspired by a fact miscellaneous about a village in Romania, where citizens of Romanian, Hungarian and German origin live, which wanted in 2020 to drive out the foreign workers who had been hired there from the local factory.

Islamophobia, racist stereotypes on hygiene and disease, fear of invasion, theory of the “great replacement”: Mungiu, Palme d’or for the masterful 4 months, 3 weeks and 2 days in 2007, Screenplay Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 2012 for Beyond the hills and Directing Award for Baccalaureate in 2016, does not spare his compatriots in NMR., which was also presented in competition at Cannes last year.

He underlines the paradox of a community made up of people from different countries, speaking different languages, who are themselves despised abroad, but do not agree to welcome anything other than white Europeans into their homes, the “historical majority”. For lack of empathy, driven by irrational fears, tapping into the darkest urges of humanity, where man joins wild animal.

NMR. is, in the image of this observation, an austere film, gray, snowy landscapes and desolation, like most of the works of Cristian Mungiu. The look that the 55-year-old filmmaker has on his society is implacable. However, it does not spare the rest of Europe, where identity movements and populism are booming.

He is as critical of unbridled capitalism, which forces less fortunate European populations into economic migration, as he is of progressive paternalistic movements.

Putting a new brick in an already solid filmography, Cristian Mungiu offers another courageous, disturbing, destabilizing film, whose enigmatic conclusion, in the form of a fable borrowing from genre cinema, left me dubious.

Exclusively at Cinéma du Parc

NMR

Drama

NMR

Christian Mungiu

Marin Grigore, Judith State, Macrina Barladeanu

2:05 a.m.

7.5/10


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