Film Review
The Portrait of the Artist as an
Abandoned Wretch, so might be labelled Bruno Dumont's latest
film
Camille Claudel, 1915,
released to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the death of France's
most celebrated female sculptor. The turbulent life of Claudel
has already been effectively dramatised, in Bruno Nuytten's
Camille
Claudel (1988). This earlier film, a typically
overblown 1980s period drama, brought Isabelle Adjani international
acclaim for her tortured portrayal of the tragic artist who allowed
herself to be destroyed by her infatuation for her mentor Auguste
Rodin. Dumont's film picks up more or less from where Nuytten's
left off, with Claudel languishing in the asylum from which she will
never be released.
In stark contrast to Nuytten's florid blockbuster epic, Bruno Dumont's
film is a much more intimate and low-key work which concerns itself
with just one incident in Claudel's life - a fateful meeting with her
brother Paul that would decide whether she would be set free to enjoy a
happy reconciliation with her family or else forced to spend the rest
of her days in obscurity, forgotten and immured at Montdevergues, an
asylum near Avignon in south-eastern France. The events depicted
in the film take place over a period of three days in 1915, three days
that would condemn Camille Claudel to a 30-year-long calvary. It
was not until 1943 that Claudel was finally released from her Hell on
Earth, starved to death as one of the less visible victims of France's
Nazi-friendly Vichy government.
Going by his work to date, Bruno Dumont appears to have as much of an
aversion for stars as he does for commercial cinema in general.
In common with Robert Bresson, the French filmmaker with whom he is
most readily compared, Dumont has no need of big name actors and
prefers the malleability and raw authenticity afforded by
non-professional or inexperienced actors. This was before Bruno
met Juliette... One of France's most high-profile and well-paid
actresses, Juliette Binoche is probably the last person you would
expect to see in a Bruno Dumont film. Yet Binoche is no stranger
to auteur cinema - let us not forget that she cut her acting teeth
working with Jean-Luc Godard (
Je vous salue, Marie), Leos
Carax (
Mauvais sang and
Les Amants du Pont-Neuf) and
Krzysztof Kieslowski (
Trois couleurs: Bleu), and
subsequently did some fine work for André Téchiné,
Michael Haneke and Olivier Assayas. So keen was she to work with
Dumont that Binoche rang him up one day and left a message on his
answer phone (well if you don't ask...); she was rewarded with one of
the most challenging roles of her career. It is not clear why
Dumont took Binoche up on her offer, but it may have had something to
do with the fact that she was exactly the same age that Camille Claudel
was when she was first committed to an asylum in 1913...
Authenticity is the central pillar of Bruno Dumont's cinema, and this
is what led him to shoot the film in an actual psychiatric hospital,
employing real patients and medical staff in place of professional
actors. It is this relentless striving to get to the truth of
things that allows Dumont to evoke, with a shocking face-pummelling
brutality, the numbing despair and hopelessness that Camille Claudel
must have felt as she lived out her last years on Earth. Having
an actress of Binoche's calibre on board wasn't so much the icing on
the cake as a Heaven-sent gift. Dumont absolutely exploits her
talents to the full and she responds by giving what is assuredly the
finest performance of her career. For the first half of the film,
the camera barely strays from Binoche's unmade-up face, and what it
reveals is something that is at once unsettling and hypnotic, the
exposed soul of a woman who, denied the freedom she desperately needs
to flourish as an artist and the affection that all human beings
naturally crave, gradually loses her mind and her will to live, in the
most inhumane of settings. Binoche holds nothing back and the
film has as much to say about her as it does about the character that
she surrenders herself to with such blithe devotion.
As is his custom, Dumont makes no attempt to humanise his
characters. The mentally disabled people that surround his
heroine are shown to us exactly as they would appear to her -
unfortunate grotesques that inspire not sympathy, but fear and
disgust. In this demonic congregation, Camille sees what she will
become if she is forced to stay in the asylum - an abandoned wretch
stripped of all human dignity. The film brings home the extent to
which mental illness is still regarded, as one of the great taboos of
our time, and if we are shocked by what Dumont shows us in his
nightmarish bedlam, that is probably because we deserve to be
shocked. To lose one's mind is surely the worst thing that can
happen to us, a far worse fate than death. And yet, through the
experiences of Camille Claudel, Dumont forces us to see the injustice
and inhumanity of our prejudices. A society that bears tolerance
and compassion for mental illness is clearly preferable to one that
treats those suffering from schizophrenia and similar disorders as
dangerous criminals.
Taking as its source letters between Camille and her brother and
documents at the asylum where she was incarcerated, the film dares to
question whether Camille Claudel was
justly admitted to the asylum in the first place. Her brother
Paul, himself a distinguished artist (a poet and playwright) as well as
a prominent diplomat, is presented to us in a way that leaves us
wondering whether he is a greater threat to society than his
unfortunate sister. A flowery romantic who sees the hand of God
in everything, Paul Claudel appears to have an even more warped view of
reality than his sister. To his naive way of thinking, the First
World War can only be taken as a sign of God's displeasure with
mankind, but he represents the prevailing bourgeois mentality of the
time and must therefore be right. He is not the best person to
sit in judgement on someone who so fiercely rejects the conventions of
bourgeois respectability as Camille Claudel.
Once the two main players in the drama have been introduced to us, the
film's last act has a mechanical predictability to it, and we can only
weep at the ease with which human beings can fail to be guided by
compassion and understanding. Had her brother allowed just a
sliver of kindness to intrude into his heart, Mademoiselle Claudel may
have overcome her persecution complex and been fit enough to resume her
artistic career. But it was not to be. Mad dogs are mad
dogs and they are best locked away where no one can see them.
Despite the austere beauty of its mise-en-scène and the compelling
performances,
Camille Claudel, 1915 is not a
comfortable film to watch, even for those already acquainted with
Dumont's cinema. Yet, long and hard as the journey is,
it takes us to somewhere meaningful, and by the end of it
you can hardly fail to be impressed by the economy and expressive
power of this, the finest accomplishment so far from
the most committed of French auteur filmmakers, aided and abetted by
an actress at the height of her powers.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Bruno Dumont film:
Ma Loute (2016)