Thursday, October 22, 2015

Alex and Eve



I have known Alex Lykos for many years now. We both studied under the same voice teacher in a pursuit of an acting career. Our voice teacher organises writer morning teas every now and then for students who are actively writing. That is how I first met Alex. As a result, I have been up to date about the development of the first Alex and Eve as a stage play up to this point that it became a movie. The road, unlike a lot of other people in the industry, was far from rosary and smooth. But Alex persisted through these draw backs and pains and is now reaping the fruit of something that is almost 10 years in the making. So how did it stack up?

Right out of the box Alex and Eve is about cultural differences and ethnicities. It is a RomCom so it played on stereotypes. Alex, with Greek heritage knows the Greek family traditions and views inside out. Also one of my best friends was Greek and I have known her family for many years. The Greek side of the couple, Alex, was pretty much spot on. The un-adulterated view of life from the Greek father and the will to hold on to his world even though Australia is not a series of small islands with white houses built on it. Eve, is of Lebanese background. She is well educated and a very successful lawyer. Her family is equally successful with a big house in the community but similar to Alex’s family, success in a new country can never mess with their purist tradition. Alex met Eve, they fell in love, but their worlds collided.

Much of Alex and Eve’s comedic elements played on stereotypes. The story was based loosely on Alex Lykos’ own experience so there are elements of authenticity. At our numerous writer morning teas, Alex and I had discussed about perpetuating cultural stereotypes on screen and on stage and I have a been a strong advocate of stereotypes should not be played for the sake of stereotyping but for the sake of helping the audience understanding that particular culture by asking further questions to understand why certain cultures have certain traditions. Alex and Eve was a work towards that direction. What I appreciated is that Alex threw questions open and attempted to understand and answer them. A number of critics mentioned how the funny and sometimes self-fulling the classroom scenes were but I personally felt they missed the point of the classroom actually was the vehicle for exemplifying questions modern second or third generation migrants have for their cultures – attempting to find where they stand between a culture they were born into and the country they were born into. They asked questions that Alex and Eve did not dare to ask openly. The strength of Alex and Eve as characters were their determination to change (like Alex moving out and Eve attempting to take charge and confront the cultural differences) but the weakness of these two characters were their inability to question and challenge fundamentals openly. The classroom scenes seemed cliché to some but these scenes actually worked as a smack on Alex’s head (which I think his father had done far too many times in the movie to be funny anymore) to move out of his cultural and personal inertia to achieve what he needs to achieve. Eve’s Muslim family on the other hand are much more progressive when we looked at it. Eve’s father initiated the families to meet with an open arm and Eve’s brother saw through the eyes of his sister and invited Alex to Eve’s arranged marriage wedding. I personally think this dynamic helped changed the balance of stereotypes especially against a lot of Muslims in this country – a lot of them are educated with open hearts – which are exactly the Muslim friends I have since university days. 

Many have written about Alex and Eve the movie itself as a standalone product, which I think is an extremely enjoyable experience. If you have been following the play from the start, it reminds you every bit of experience you had in the theatre and puts a smile on your face. To an extent it is a good fan service. But what I would like to point out is the ability of this movie to address cultural differences without overplaying stereotypes and clichés as a lot of other movies did. It is a comedy so you do need a to amplify stereotypes, but instead of flying free like free range chickens, Alex Lykos reined it in through two characters – the Greek father (whom in my opinion was a bit over the top at times) and the Lebanese mother (whom I also think was a bit hard to digest at times but exhibited great softer sides that balanced the character out). But it was because they were so loud in the movie that you started to feel for other characters and listening to them questioning these stereotypes and clichés as you go. I personally quite like the scene of Eve’s mother stereotyping Anglo Australians in the café right in front of Eve’s best friend, who is an Anglo Australian. I found it funny because in this scene the table was turned and the expression on Eve’s friend’s face was gold. It helps people who enjoyed stereotyping other cultures thinking about how one would feel if you in return were being rounded up into minimal cultural existence that was exaggerated and superficial.  

I am not going to rate Alex and Eve by points like most other people do as that’s not what I do. But as a standalone movie, I think Alex and Eve is an Australian movie that I enjoyed immensely since The Sapphires. Maybe as a person who has been championing cultural diversity of Australian screen and stage I am more akin to these productions, but Alex and Eve’s significance in my opinion does not just lie in the cultural aspect but it being written and produced with an audience in mind. I think that is where most Australian movies fell short. Alex and Eve does not attempt to be a ground breaking cultural RomCom but it knows its audience and it knows where it stands in the Australian cultural landscape. I think that is the most important thing to learn for a lot of film makers in this country. A film could be made with great quality but without an audience it is nothing but a piece of pet toothache literature that nobody cares about. You achieve an Australian voice only when a drop of a pin in your movie resonated throughout the halls of all the cinemas it was playing. That was how it felt when I was at the screening.

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