An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker (2013) Poster

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8/10
A sad state of affairs
Horst_In_Translation19 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
But this only refers to the contents of the movie, not its quality. Danis Tanovic won the Oscar for Best Foreign Langue Film 2001 for "No Man's Land", about Amélie for example, back when he was just in his early 30s and here, over 10 years later he displays "An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker". Don't worry though. It's not 75 monotonous minutes of a man collection garbage. Actually there's only two scenes, one on his own, one with his colleagues and they're both pretty good in terms of atmosphere and context. The story is set in Bosnia, during wintertime and we see a family (husband, wife, two daughters) who doesn't have much, but is still relatively happy with their life.

Things take a turn for the worse when the mother has a miscarriage and, as she has no insurance, we witness for a long time, how they desperately try to get doctors to remove the dead child while her health constantly deteriorates. The scenes where the father is begging to the nurses and doctors is particularly heartbreaking. He even offers interest payment which would take him months to get the money together if they could operate his wife immediately, but they refuse as the head physician refuses. So they're definitely not trying to cheat, they just want to save the mother's life. At one point, it's mentioned how the father fought in the war, but has received to securities or anything afterward and that's how he ended up collection iron in order to make a living. Finally, with some kind of insurance fraud, they still get to save the woman's life. Thankfully the people in Bosnia stick together support each other in order to have access to the most basic things that are pretty much taken for granted in my country Germany, for example. It's so strange to see health insurance by the government non-existent in other countries and it is really shocking. The film has many moving scenes, like when he and the two girls wait outside for their mother, or how he cries that God always punishes the poor ones.

When they come back home and the mother had her operation, the next troubles arise already (yep torture porn alert) as it's winter, snow everywhere and the electricians where there and pulled off electricity as they didn't pay for it for a while. When it's switched back on shortly after and the mother says something like it's back on and we see the girls smiling because they wouldn't have to freeze anymore and can watch their cartoons again in their TV with terrible quality. Very touching scene and it really made me think how simple things and pleasures can make such a difference in many regions of the world. It's something we, in the richer countries, tend to forget more and more unfortunately in the age of kitsch and waste.

All in all, it's a film I recommend very much. It's almost a documentary (the daughters are really the lead actor's daughters judging from the name) and everybody did a fine job given they've never acted in a film before. It felt so real. I'm not 100% sure, but I think it wasn't, judging from how nobody ever looked into the camera, the kids or the doctors, nurses etc. for example. This film was selected as submission to the Oscars, but I don't think it will appeal to the Academy as much as Tanovic's previous work and as much as it did to me. Also, I've seen a couple other very good foreign films already that were submitted (Chile, Germany, Saudi-Arabia, Denmark), so competition seems stiff this year and I'd be quite surprised if it gets nominated. It's a very intriguing study of society though and I recommend it a lot.
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6/10
Picking Iron and other things
kosmasp8 August 2013
It could also have been "An incident in the life of ...". The movie that plays as if it was a documentary (the story does not seem too far stretched) and the people who most likely are not actors in this do a more than proper job. I defy anyone not being touched by the events unfolding in this movie.

Of course some might also say that this shows how far apart we are from each other. Simple things like this would not have broken a sweat in another country, but it is a real tough break for the characters here. Should you start re-thinking what you feel about your life then? It might work for a second, but we mostly fall back to old patterns until we actually are shaken ourselves that is.

So while the story and the idea in general is really good, actors would have actually made a difference. A proper script too. The shooting style fits the no budget/money category this plays in. For a couple things did really annoy me and drew part of my sympathy from the people portrayed in the movie. The situation and the fact, that people have to go through those circumstances is despicable. And it's good that a movie made people aware. But I'm rating the movie, not the impact or the real story behind it
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6/10
Life is tough
wickedmikehampton16 December 2020
Serbia is a harshly beautiful place. 'An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker' doesn't show the beauty.

A man lives in a poor village, keeping his family going with the little money he makes from chopping wood and collecting scrap iron. When his wife gets sick, he cannot afford to pay the hospital, so they won't operate. Eventually, they commit fraud, using a family member's insurance. He then sells his car, incidentally the same model as the only two cars I've ever had, as scrap to pay for her medicine and get electricity restored to his home.

There was no grand plot, just a quick lesson in the pain of being poor.
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10/10
Tanovic tells it like it is
Radu_A16 February 2013
Danis Tanovic's semi-documentary won this year's Grand Jury Prize at the Berlin Film Festival, in spite of having been produced on a shoestring budget of €50000. The jury thus honored the most relevant film in the competition, owing to the fact that for the first time ever, the conditions of life of Roma (gypsies), Europe's largest stateless minority, is accurately described. The film is much more effective than I expected it to be for two reasons: one, it's focused on a not particularly spectacular, yet shocking incident and two, instead of using professional non-Roma actors, the actual Roma couple to whom this happened re-enacts the events - a move so bold that the jury deemed it worthy to award the actor's Silver Bear to the male lead.

The story: Nazif, an 'iron picker' who takes apart used cars and household appliances with basic tools to sell their metal for scrap. His wife Senada, a mother of two, takes care of their ramshackle house in a remote Bosnian village. One day, she complains of cramps so Nazif takes her to a hospital in the next city Tuzla. They learn that Senada has miscarried and needs to have the dead fetus removed. However, the clinic they are referred to refuses to perform the operation because they have no health insurance; they are asked to pay 980 marks (€500) which they do not have. Nazif must find a solution within days or else Senada dies.

Tanovic's skill as a film-maker shows in his strapping of the story to the absolutely essential. Working with non- actors, he waives all emotional development, which is a radical departure from his earlier films, like the Oscar-winning 'No Man's Land' (2001) or the Colin Farrell-starring 'Triage' (2009). I've read reviews which criticize this rigid no-nonsense approach, citing the muteness of the performances, but in fact, Nazif and Senada's unexcited response to their predicament is the very strength of the film, because this is the response of people who have been said 'no' to all their life: resignation. So it comes as no surprise that when aid workers urge Senada to accompany them to go to the clinic for a third time, she refuses, meekly repeating 'it's no use'. Being half-Rom from my mother's side, I can assure you that this is indeed the fatalistic reaction to even far more serious challenges, but many people seem to expect gypsies to behave like in a Kusturica film. These, however, are not and were never intended to be an actual portrayal of gypsy life.

What prompts Tanovic to tackle this issue materializes in a brief exchange between Nazif and the aid workers: although he served in the Bosnian war of Independence, he did not receive any benefits or a pension like other veterans. The film does not elaborate on this - too much explanation would have hurt the film's focus, but since I translated testimonies of Ashkali (Kosovo gypsies) refugees for an NGO during the conflict, I might as well add that this is a common phenomenon on the Balkans where gypsies represent the lowest end of the social spectrum, and suffer from structural racism in accordance with this 'role'. For instance, in Kosovo, gypsies were driven out of their houses by returning Albanians who had their houses razed by the Serbs, accusing them of collaboration, and UNMIK - the UN administration - didn't act on their behalf because they focused on appeasing the national minorities.

The solution Nazif finds in the end stays in the family, illustrating that Roma have only their own kind to rely on. Because of the film's two wins, maybe a larger number of people will finally become aware of this problem which, in my view, is the most pressing and shameful European reality today: we notice Roma when they steal or beg or wipe our windscreens without asking, but we never wonder why they do. There's an uncomfortably large number of people who believe that Roma are abject and poor or even criminal 'by nature', and this film could serve as an instrument to change this perception if it gets screened in classrooms.
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picture from East
Vincentiu18 August 2013
at first sigh, a film about Gypsies life. a case from Balkans. at the second, a kind of documentary. in fact, only a picture. because it is a beautiful puzzle in which the survive of a small community, the fight against the rules of the others, the furnaces from Tuzla and the fear, hope, sadness of Nazif , the links between community members, solution for a serious problem, the hall of hospital, the girls, the dialogs, gestures of Senada are more than scenes but pieces of a message about East reality. Danis Tanovic has the great virtue to maintain the precise measure in each scene. nothing strange. nothing extraordinary. only a honest picture from East. in the skin of humiliation resignation and unusual solution for the viewer out of this small circle.scenes from ordinary existence, so far by usual jaundices
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story from East
Kirpianuscus7 June 2017
so simple than it can be mark of a state of things who seems be normal. portrait of a case, it represents image of a community challenges. because it is a honest, cruel in its honesty, story about ordinary people, a bureaucratic system , about the importance of the other and about hope. nothing new. only useful as precise remind of the small events around us. a story of survive. one of the examples who transform the policies against discrimination in weird speech. because it is a film about the other and its great virtue is the science of precise measure , the admirable cinematography, the symbols of a clash between Nazif family ad the world. a film about life. and its prices.
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