Film Review
French films that trace the traumatic itinerary of a young person from
adolescence to adulthood are not too hard to come by, but in his latest
film director Safy Nebbou does so through the noir-tinted lens of
the psychological thriller, and the result is as quietly disturbing as
it is poignant.
Comme un homme
(a.k.a.
Bad Seeds) is adapted
from a 1970s novel
L'Âge
bête by the legendary writing team Pierre Boileau and
Thomas Narcejac, whose crime novels have inspired many notable films,
not least of which are H.G. Clouzot's
Les
Diaboliques (1955) and Hitchcock's
Vertigo (1958). The film
is a complete contrast with Nebbou's most recent film, the grandiose
historical biopic
L'Autre Dumas (2010), and has
much more in common with his earlier film,
L'Empreinte de l'ange (2008),
a slick little thriller that helped to raise his international profile.
The film's most inspired touch is the casting of Emile Berling
alongside his father Charles. Barely into his twenties, Berling
Jr has already established himself as one of France's most promising
young actors - who can forget his heartrending performance in Christian
Faure's
Les Hauts murs (2008)? - and
his authentic portrayal of a deeply troubled adolescent in Nebbou's
film merely reinforces this impression. Like his father, Emile
Berling is naturally an introspective performer, his particular talent
being his ability to a project his character's inner conflict and
feelings in a way that is totally belied by his placid exterior.
If you met him, you could easily mistake him for a boy chorister, yet
beneath the cool, angelic exterior you can just sense an inferno of
raging emotions. His presence is what gives the film its brooding
mood of melancholia and anxiety, amplified to harrowing proportions by
Pierre Cottereau's wonderfully atmospheric photography.
Emile Berling's character, Louis, is not one that we can instantly
engage with. He feels remote, too easily influenced by the bad
company he falls in with, and he soon begins to resemble just another
adolescent thug who takes pleasure in victimising others. This
impression is reversed in the second half of the film when the reasons
for Louis's disaffection and moral deficit become apparent. It is
revealed that for the past four years (following the death of his
mother) Louis has lived in a kind of emotional desert, distanced from
his father (who deals with his bereavement by burying himself in his
solitary pursuits) and starved of affection. Both Louis and his
father are immured by a grief that dare not speak its name, but it is
the teenage boy who suffers most by having his emotional development
arrested. If the film has a message it is that society has an
obligation to look more kindly on juvenile delinquents,
many of whom deserve to be given a second chance after being
emotionally disfigured by their environment. Louis is not a
monster but a child who has gone astray through misfortune and
neglect. The process by which he slowly wakes up to the horror of
his crime and acquires a moral awareness as part of his adult awakening
is intelligently scripted and played by Emile Berling with remarkable
maturity and sensitivity.
Where the film is perhaps slightly less successful is in melding its
disparate themes and styles into a coherent whole. In terms of
both its plot and its visual composition,
Comme un homme is a very choppy
film, unsure whether it is a traditional thriller, a coming-of-age
drama or a family melodrama. To a degree, the film's fragmented
nature can be justified, as this helps to establish the fractured
identity of its main character, but the erratic switching between
genres is a little jarring at times and takes the emotional edge off
some key scenes. It is also a pity the screenwriters didn't iron
out some of the more noticeable plot contrivances and give a little
more attention to the secondary characters. Despite commendable
performances by Sarah Stern and Kévin Azaïs, Camille and
Greg come across as two-dimensional ciphers, their sole purpose being
to drive the plot along instead of being characters we can engage with.
The most effective scenes in the film are those in which Emile and
Charles Berling play opposite one another. The unfathomable
complexity of the father-son relationship is captured with an almost
documentary-style realism as Louis and his father try and repeatedly
fail to make contact with one another. Their body language, their
gestures, the looks in their eyes - these say far more about what the
two characters are thinking and feeling than any amount of
dialogue. Emile Berling has stated that he found these scenes the
most difficult to perform, but they are the heart and soul of the film
and give it a depth and humanity it desperately needs to hold it
together. Whatever shortcomings the film may have are more than made up
for by the outstanding performances from the two Berlings.
Comme un homme may not be quite as
meticulously constructed as
L'Empreinte
de l'ange, but this latest offering from Safy Nebbou is every
bit as compelling and elegantly crafted - unsettling but also deeply
moving.
© James Travers 2012
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