
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
In A Touch of Spice film-maker Tassos Boulmetis tells the
complex and lyrical story of a sensitive boy Fanis Iakovidis (Markos Osse as young boy,
Odysseas Papaspiliopoulos at 20, George Corraface at 40-ish), his grandfather Vassilis
(Tassos Bandis) and life in their corner of the world, the ethnic Greek enclave of eastern
Constantinople in the 1950s. The original Greek title of the film Politiki Kouzina (roughly,
"cuisine from Istanbul") serves as the overarching metaphor for the several
narrative strands the film pursues. Grandpa Vassilis owns a small general store and is an
expert on the uses of spices in cooking and in the art of persuasion in human affairs. As
a boy Fanis displays a prodigious culinary talent, and raptly struggles to embrace every
scrap of philosophy Grandpa Vassilis offers him. Over time, Fanis obsession with
cooking becomes an embarrassment to his father, but a guide by which to steer his life.
Fanis first infatuation, with Saime (Basak Koklükaya), a
beautiful young Turkish girl, proves as deep and abiding a bond as the one between
grandson and grandfather. The indestructible bond tying the Greek Iakovidis clan and their
ethnic Greek and Turkish neighbors together is an abiding attachment to "The
Polis" (Constantinople, later Istanbul), "the most beautiful city in the
world." The strength of such powerful, yet invisible bonds, and how emotional
attachments make up the spices of life, are explored and sorely tested as political events
serve, time and again, to pull people apart. The regional political turmoil the
deportation of Greek nationals from Turkey in 1959 (over political tensions in Cyprus),
the xenophobic reception in Greece to the exiled Istanbul Greeks, the Greek military junta
of 1964 and related ethnic strife between Greek and Turkish Cypriotes leading to the
division of Cyprus 1964, all complicating personal responses to an uncertain world
serve not as background history lessons but as central characters, whose ability to add
spice to life is overpowering.
Boulmetis tells his tale in flashbacks and extensive narrator
voiceovers, concentrating on pivotal moments in Fanis life, which are offered up as
a cooking course with instruction in "preparation," "main course,"
"dessert," and a denouement served up as "presentation." Grandpa
teaches the basic spices using the planets as (conveniently symbolic) mnemonic devices.
("Pepper is hot and scorches like the sun," as the tag line for the film
states.) Fanis acquires from his grandpa the habit of rubbing (sent and received)
postcards in spices, associating a specific taste with a specific place, the film
symbolically implying relationships between emotional and political life. When Fanis is
deported to Athens, Saime gives him her toy baking kitchen, which becomes his most prized
possession, tying the loves of his life (Saime and cooking) to his early life in Turkey
and his later life in Greece. The excessively symbolic language of the film eventually
overwhelms the narrative logic as Fanis grows up, he utterly forgets his youthful
passions yet becomes a professor of astrophysics (because spices are like orbiting
planets).
The evocative period settings of urban ethnic neighborhoods and
domestic interiors, the attention to historical details of clothing and customs, the
gradual arrival of American consumer products create in the film a compelling sense of
lived reality. As a counterweight to the heavy metaphorical spicing, the film also
situates individual lives lived in precise contexts of unfolding political history. In
doing so it offers glimpses into realities unknown, even largely unsuspected, by most
American movie-goers. The look and feel, even the heavily suggested taste and smell, which
A Taste of Spice evokes is both compelling and haunting. The nearest visual
imagery from Hollywood carries echoes of Jewish and East European immigrant life in
pre-World War II America. The severe and cruel interventions of larger ethnic and
nationalist political realities also hearken to stories from the Nazi era.
While the image and reality of a bitterly divided Berlin have recently
faded into history, the stark fact of a deeply troubled and still very much divided
Cyprus, and troubled relations between Greece and Turkey, remain. Too many cooks in the
kitchen can spoil the broth. Fanis and his grandpa, Saime and her husband, and all the
rest of the one-time enclave dwellers survive into the present day (or not), dislocated
and relocated, trampled and tattered, yet still loving and still hoping. Only nowadays,
everyone speaks English, sidestepping the tourists in Istanbul and Athens.
- Les Wright