Film Review
Black Moon is one of the few truly experimental
films to have been made since WWII, a bizarre free-flowing expressionist fantasy which
evokes the early work of
Jean Cocteau
and
Luis Buñuel. It was
one of the last films that director Louis Malle made in France before his move
to America in the late 1970s and is probably the most atypical in his entire
oeuvre. A contemporary of the French New Wave, Malle is far better known
for his intimate low-key dramas -
Le Feu follet (1963),
Le Souffle au coeur (1971)
and
Au revoir, les enfants (1987) -
and stylish thriller
Ascenseur pour l'échafaud (1958),
although some of his films show a flair for experimentation -
Zazie dans le métro (1960),
Vanya on 42nd Street (1994).
Black Moon is in a league of its own. Malle's most
inaccessible and baffling film, it presents a kind of dystopian version
of Alice in Wonderland in which any notion of logic and coherence
appears to have been abolished. It's tempting to try to make sense of the narrative - are
we being shown a dream, the frenzied hallucinations of a schizophrenic girl or everyday
life in a parallel universe? - but Malle does just about everything he can to thwart such
a venture. The film deliberately defies any attempt at rationalisation.
The film's lack of coherence and deliberate ambiguity
are certainly frustrating, ensuring that it was never going to be a commercial success.
However, the pedigree of both its director and its cinematographer Sven Nykvist (famous
for his work on Ingmar Bergman's
Winter Light (1962) and
Persona (1966))
are borne out by the film's alluring artistry.
What may to us look like an incomprehensible fantasy may in fact be an ingenious
allegory of our time - where social breakdown is increasingly
evident and man seems ever driven to pervert the laws of nature for his own end.
Could
Black Moon be how an alien being would
see the world we now inhabit, or is it perhaps something more - a glimpse into our not
to distant future?
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Louis Malle film:
Pretty Baby (1978)
Film Synopsis
The world is caught in an interminable war in which men round up women and
execute them. An adolescent girl named Lily narrowly escapes the same
fate as she makes her way across a war-torn landscape. Even in the
remote countryside, the sounds of war are all around. Finally, Lily
arrives at a seemingly deserted house in the middle of nowhere. Inside,
she finds a bedridden old woman who communicates with a rat and speaks into
the microphone of an improvised radio transmitter. After being attacked
by the old woman, Lily runs out into the garden and is met by a singing man.
The latter's brother then appears on horseback. A succession of strange
and frightening visions assail Lily as she tries to make sense of her new
predicament. She sees herds of naked children running about, snakes
in a drawer and a talking unicorn. Lily wants to escape, but she cannot.
It is like being in a dream...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.