Preamble
April 2011: a Romanian in his twenties, a poor worker residing in the small Spanish town of Torrejon de Ardez, kills his pregnant, nineteen-year-old Romanian fiancee. The last minutes of the ordeal and the corpse are filmed with a webcam and shown ‘live’ via the Internet to the family of the girl in their country of origin. The criminal is arrested within minutes as the parents reel from the traumatic shock.
This is neither a snuff movie nor the latest minimalist production of the New Romanian Wave which rose to worldwide fame in the first decade of the twenty-first century for its dark, sombre and depressive hyper-realist dramas. It is the depiction of only one of the many stories revealing some of the sombre results of the exodus of a population coming from a ‘marginal space’ of Europe, a nation that woke up from the communist nightmare confused about its identity, living a permanent ‘frontier situation’ and ‘still in the search of the way ahead’ (Boia 2001: 12–13, 27).
Twenty-five years after the fall of the communism, Romanian villages are depopulated. The locals, once not even allowed to hold a passport, are now leaving the country at an alarming and increasing rate. The often tragic results of this exodus are nevertheless profound, with dramatic long-term consequences. Thousands of children are left without proper supervision or education. The family, once at the centre of patriarchal society, has been destroyed in the desperate rush of parents towards the West. A good number of their children will later become criminals, closing a vicious circle. This is the dramatic resort of Eu cand vreau să fluier, fluier When I want to whistle, I whistle (Florin ‘erban, 2010, Romania/Sweden/Germany) and the philosophy behind Periferic Outbound (Bogdan George Apetri, 2011, Romania), the film that closes stylistically the first decade of New Romanian Cinema. The young criminal from Torrejon de Ardez, Spain might easily have been Paul, the protagonist from Outbound.