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The Last Rites
IDFA 2008

The Last Rites

Requiem for a Ship
Yasmine Kabir
Bangladesh
2008
17 min
International Premiere
Festival history

They're called the ship-breaking yards: the graveyards of ocean-going vessels near Chittagong in Bangladesh. In the foreground, fishermen wade through low water with nets in hand; in the background, we see the gigantic ships on their sides, waiting for the day they'll be taken apart.
is a short, silent account in which director Yasmine Kabir is more in search of the poetry of the images than an all-encompassing record of the events. She juxtaposes the insignificance of the men against the towering sides of the ships. The fire of the welding machine is the only warmth in the dark backgrounds of cold steel. This is where the ships come to die. Not all at once with a bang, but slowly, only as fast as the men can dismantle them. After all, the ships aren't taken apart with big cranes, but rather by the welders, piece by piece. One sheet of metal at a time, until nothing's left, and then more ships arrive for dismantling. is Kabir's third documentary at IDFA. After her first in 2000, her second film was screened in 2003: a heartbreaking story about a woman who walked the streets of the town of Kopilmoni like a crazy person after her family was murdered.

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