Some thoughts after seeing the film
I thought The Act of Killing was sensational, so there was no way I could miss Oppenheimer's follow-up.
The Look of Silence makes a very interesting companion piece to TAoK. While the former film was a surreal exposé of the killers, this focusses on the family of one victim. It's like Oppenheimer's saying: I showed you who did it, what they're like, how they did it - now let's learn about the damage they did. TAoK, while shocking and disturbing, didn't really have this human element.
But this is definitely a more traditional documentary than its predecessor...which IMO makes it slightly less memorable. Also, we end up hearing much of the same shocking material again, since the majority of the film is Adi (the victim's younger brother) interviewing the perpetrators. I guess some could argue that the details have added weight when there's a direct family link, but personally I was constantly thinking about this (the impact on people and families) during TAoK anyway...
I sound negative, but of course TLoS is still extremely powerful and memorable. The scenes with Adi's parents, at their village home, are beautiful and something completely new: the benefit of this new film is that it contains a fascinating mini-social study - how often do you get to see into the home of an elderly Indonesian couple? His dad is 103, looks like a [barely] living skeleton, while his mum is formidable and fun. I loved her - she's the star of the film. And it's the dedication and tenderness - between Adi and his mum, between his mum and dad, between Adi and his daughter - that allow you to feel a bit better about humanity again (just).
I just can't help comparing TLoS to the bizarre, insane, totally unique TAoK and that's a hell of an Act (pun intended) to follow! But it is an excellent, deeply moving documentary. I suppose I just can't shift the feeling that this is essentially a supplement?
Please share your own thoughts, whether related to my points or not.
That is a masterpiece of understatement.