 
  A TV show production manager contends with personal and professional
      issues over the course of a day.
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Ben Hecking
  Starring: Kate Kennedy, Balázs Czukor, Fehiniti Balogun, Jack Morris, Claudia Jolly, Will Brown,
      Grace Chilton, Deborah Findlay
 
    
      Before the advent of camcorders and smartphones, consumers wishing to
        preserve moving picture memories had to rely on the Super 8 format. The
        grainy texture of the 8mm format has come to symobolise memory and
        nostalgia, and when it's deployed by filmmakers it's usually to evoke
        both sensations, the classic example perhaps being the credits sequence
        for The Wonder Years.
    
      Writer/director/cinematographer Ben Hecking's second feature
        Haar is a rare movie shot completely on Super 8 stock.
        Where the format is usually purposely made to look amateurish, the
        striking compositions of Haar remind you that when
        utilised by professionals this cheapest of film formats has a quality
        lacking in digital.

      Though set in the present day, Haar has a nostalgic feel
        exacerbated by its use of Super 8. Hecking leaves in flares and
        scratches, and even a stray hair in the gate at one point, which gives
        it the immediacy of the professional but rushed productions of 1970s and
        '80s British TV. The title refers to a designation for a type of mist
        that comes in from the sea, and the film equates a fractured memory with
        a fog, where some images are clearer than others, and sometimes our eyes
        and minds can betray us.
    
      Over the course of a day, Jef (Kate Kennedy) is forced to
        confront both her future and her past as she's hit with two bombshells.
        Jef is a production manager for a TV show being shot in Budapest, and
        with the show having just wrapped, she has a few last minute errands to
        run before leaving the city. While contending with her professional
        duties, Jef discovers she's pregnant, likely the result of a fling with
        the show's leading man, Bill (Jack Morris). A phone call from her
        mother brings the bad news of her father's passing following three
        successive heart attacks.

      Jef is statuesque, Amazonian even, but as they say, the bigger they
        are, the harder they fall. She tries to keep it together as she gets on
        with her job, but her rigid frame can't disguise the emotions she's
        suppressing. On a video call with Bill she conceals the news of her
        pregnancy, instead indulging in a mutual masturbation session. She tells
        people she wasn't close to her father (who named her Jef because he
        wanted a boy), but the doubt on her face tells us she might have been
        closer than she thought. Despite her mental state, Jef attends a party,
        where a past lover (Fehiniti Balogun) gets some things off his
        chest about how her self-absorption makes those around her feel
        belittled.
    
      Watching this well-maintained, professional woman slowly mentally
        unravel over the course of 80 minutes is like watching a tranquilised
        giraffe collapse in slow-motion. In her first leading feature role,
        Kennedy is a captivating presence. With her easy-going front and
        attractive looks, we can see why Jef is accustomed to being in control
        of other people, but also how her aloofness might lead to others being
        trampled in her over-bearing presence. We see an early example of this
        in how Jef charms a woman who complains that her production left damage
        at the location she allowed be filmed, the final look on the woman's
        face that of someone trying to figure out if they've just had their
        pocket picked.

      Like many who exude an air of confidence, Jef is a mess internally. In
        a striking piece of acting we watch as Jef takes a rare breather to sit
        on a park bench and eat a sandwich. Hecking holds his camera on
        Kennedy's face as it betrays a myriad of thoughts and emotions as though
        Jef is trying to compartmentalise her troubles in the manner she might
        deal with various work issues. Though we only hear her voice,
        Deborah Findlay is subtly affecting as Jef's distraught mother,
        and her interactions with her distant daughter are almost word for word
        those I had with my own mother when she broke the news of my father's
        passing in similar circumstances.
    
      Haar is a tender tale of a tough woman. With its
        protagonist traversing a scenic European city, it has the feel of
        Linklater's Before Sunrise, but instead of asking the audience if two protagonists might fall in
        love, it proffers the question of whether one woman might learn to love
        herself. In Kennedy's Jef we're reminded that self-absorption is often a
        close cousin of self-doubt.
    
     
       
