Film Review
As film censorship rules were relaxed in the late 1980s, early 1990s,
cinema audiences would soon become accustomed to displays of graphic
violence that would have been unthinkable only a decade earlier.
American cinema was first off the mark with a series of increasingly
horrific slasher movies, but Europe was not far behind.
Benoît Poelvoorde's
C'est arrivé près de chez
vous (1992) offered an orgy of mindless death and
destruction that still continues to shock, even though the film was
intended as a black comedy, an attempt to satirise society's increasing
appetite for ultra-violence in its entertainment. Albert
Dupontel's
Bernie follows in
a similar comedic vein but, with its grisly spectacle of mayhem,
mutilation and massacre, offers few easy laughs and is a profoundly
disturbing film.
This was Dupontel's first full-length film as a director. He had
by this stage established himself as an actor, with several impressive
film credits already under his belt, and he had also made one short
film.
Bernie is clearly
not a cheap shocker but a well-meant attempt to portray the failings of
society - the breakdown of family life, the commercialisation of human
relationships, the banality of violence, the impotence of the police,
etc. - but it appears so caught up in itself that it feels like a
self-indulgent orgy of artistic excess. There are a few touches
of brilliance but cinematographic technique and simulated violence are
carried to absurd extremes whilst the characters are poorly developed
and lacking in credibility, despite some very commendable performances. The film
succeeds in drawing our
attention to the failings of the world around us but offers very little
hope for the future.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Albert Dupontel film:
Le Créateur (1999)
Film Synopsis
Bernie has spent his entire life in an orphanage. He has no
family, no knowledge of his origins, but, aged 30, he is determined to
find out where he comes from. With the savings he has accumulated
during his time in the orphanage, he takes an apartment in Paris and
begins his quest in earnest. He starts by raiding the offices of
the social security so that he can lay his hands on his personal
file. He discovers that, at the age of two weeks, he was found
abandoned in a rubbish bin. Unable to believe that his parents
could do this to him, Bernie concocts a theory that he was abducted by
gangsters shortly after he was born. He is now more than ever
determined to find his mother and father, knowing that they will be
overjoyed to see him again after all these years...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.