Film Review
In
7 ans, his first
full-length film, director Jean-Pascal Hattu broaches a subject that is
hardly ever talked about, let alone given a dramatic treatment, but is
one which nonetheless deserves our attention. There have been
many films which show the effect of incarceration from the point of
view of the prisoner, but surprisingly few that have tackled the
same situation from the perspective of a spouse of a detainee.
Hattu's remarkable debut feature explores, with brutal lucidity and
searing humanity, the effect that an enforced separation has on a young
woman who finds herself torn between her loyalty to her husband and her
natural sexual needs. It is a stark and provocative piece of
cinema in which its three central protagonists are driven into a
perverse
ménage a trois
situation as a result of their frustrated desires and mutual love.
The focus of the drama is Maïté, who is devoted to her
husband Vincent, a man serving a seven-year prison sentence. The
intensely physical relationship of these two characters is revealed to
us through the fetishistic way in which Maïté washes and
irons her husband's soiled laundry and the wave of suppressed desire
that surfaces whenever she meets him in the prison visiting room.
Yet Maïté's needs are far greater than can be satisfied by
sniffing dirty underwear and a quick grope when the warder's back is
turned. Vincent is not the only one who is
imprisoned. Maïté too is condemned, forced to live a
semi-existence inhabited by empty rituals and miserable solitude.
When the stranger Jean enters her life and offers her no-strings sex in
his car she appears to have regained her zest for living. It is
never Jean that she makes love to, but her husband - this self-deceit
is how she assuages her guilt so that she can remain the faithful wife
whilst regaining her status as a complete woman. But things are
not what they seem. Jean is not only gratifying
Maïté's needs; he is also servicing the perverted desires
of Vincent, who has lured him into a Faustian pact so that he may reach
Maïté in the only way he can, via a proxy lover. The one thing
that Vincent has overlooked is the possibility that Jean and
Maïté might fall in love...
7 ans is one of the most
thought-provoking and original French dramas of the past decade, an
arresting excursion into new territory with its courageous portrayal of the limits
that individuals will go to to satisfy their desires. Assisted by
talented screenwriter Gilles Taurand, Jean-Pascal Hattu conjures up a
world of quiet despair and intense emotional longing, where the
unintended consequences of an imperfect judicial system are exposed
with blistering compassion and acuity. Assistant to André
Téchiné on
Les Roseaux sauvages (1994) and
Les
Voleurs (1996), Hattu had previously made a number of
documentaries including one for the Franco-Belgian television programme
Strip-Tease about the life of
prison warders. It was whilst making this latter short film that
Hattu developed an interest in the effect that incarceration has on
inmates and their spouses. His original intention was to make a
documentary, but this proved to be a non-starter when the prison
authorities refused to give their support.
Hattu's film may be fictional but there is an almost visceral
documentary feel to its rendering of the bleakest of existential
landscapes, trenchant realism tinged with a crisp but twisted poetry
and a darkly sinister eroticism. Not only does it convincingly
depict the harsh regime of life in prison (which is not nearly as cosy
as the tabloids will have us believe), but it also propels us into the
tormented inner worlds of the three protagonists who, in different ways,
are all victims of an inhumane prison system. Thanks to Hattu's mature
direction and the arresting performances of the three leads
(Valérie Donzelli, Cyril Troley and Bruno Todeschini - all
excellent beyond words),
7 ans
is a haunting piece of cinema that makes an extremely powerful artistic
and social statement.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Maïté and Vincent are a young couple who find it hard to bear
their enforced separation. Recently, Vincent has been convicted of
a crime and sent to prison for seven years. Twice a week, Maïté
dutifully visits him to exchange a few words and collect his soiled laundry,
which she cleans and irons with care. It is during one of these visits
to the prison that Maïté meets Jean, a young man whose brother
is also behind bars. Before she knows it, Maïté is embarking
on an intense but loveless physical relationship with a man she knows nothing
about. It comes as a great surprise to Maïté to learn that
Jean is a warder at the prison where her Vincent is incarcerated. When
Vincent learns of Maïté's infidelity he asks Jean to tape
their meetings...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.