In 2017, Aki Kaurismäki announced his short-lived retirement from the film industry.
“I’m tired. I want to start living my own life,” he said, in an interview. “I have said this before, but it really is adios now.”
Six years on, however, he’s rescinded his farewell.
Earlier this year, the celebrated Finnish director launched his latest film, “Fallen Leaves,” at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Jury Prize.
The film follows two lonely people trying to find the first love of their lives in Helsinki. It marks the fourth instalment of the filmmaker's famous “Proletariat” film series, which includes “Shadows in Paradise” (1986), “Ariel” (1988), and “The Match Factory Girl” (1990).
The first three tragicomedies feature lonely characters from the proletariat, who struggle to maintain jobs or fill the void in their lives. Jaded and down on their luck, they eventually find love and freedom.
There’s a dry humour to his films and characters, who attempt to fill the emptiness of their lives with alcohol, cigarettes and oversized sunglasses, all to the soundtrack of Renegades songs (or sad blues tunes) in their Cadillac. (“When there's no hope, there's no reason for pessimism, either,” Kaurismäki has said, in the past, which seems to sum up his characters' ethos.)
In the style of French director Robert Bresson, Kaurismäki takes a minimalist yet meticulous approach behind the lens.
But unlike Bresson, whose drama is communicated visually, Kaurismäki places his characters’ internal journey at the dramatic core of his films, striking the perfect balance between cold comedy and the warmth of human emotion.
Hope shines through
The protagonists of “Fallen Leaves,” Ansa (Alma Pöysti) and Holappa (Jussi Vatanen), are more reminiscent of Kaurismäki’s ‘80s and ‘90s films than his more recent works.
Ansa, who works at a supermarket, barely speaks throughout the movie. After getting caught stealing an expired sandwich from work, she’s fired.
Meanwhile, Holappa is a tall, pleasant construction worker; he’s a heavy drinker and a man of few words. One day, he goes to a karaoke pub with his colleague and roommate but refuses to get behind the microphone, because “tough men do not sing” (or so he says).
At the pub, Ansa and Holappa's eyes meet. They exchange reluctant gazes. Eventually, they overcome their timidness and decide to go on a date to the movies. (At this point, Holappa doesn't know Ansa's name.)