Film Review
Director Nicolas Boukhrief followed up his highly original and
well-received modernist action thriller
Le
Convoyeur (2004) with this equally innovative and stylish
suspense thriller set in possibly the bleakest of worlds.
With its cunning blurring of reality and
imagination, its gallery of morally ambiguous characters and some inventive
subjective camerawork,
Cortex
has a distinctly Hitchcockian feel to it. There are also some
dark aspects of social realism - offering a grim insight into the
world of Alzheimer's victims and their carers - which make watching it an unsettling and
thought-provoking experience.
André Dussollier heads an impressive cast - which includes such
talented actors as Aurore Clément, Marthe Keller, Pascal
Elbé and Julien Boisselier, all excellent. In one of his
toughest role in years, Dussollier gives a superlative performance,
which poignantly evokes the distress and anxiety of an Alzheimer
sufferer struggling to hang on to reality, without drenching the plot
with a surfeit of overplayed emotion.
As in
Le Convoyeur, this film
suffers from uneven pacing, although the biggest let down is the denouement, which is
handled a little too predictably, lacking the surprise element which
the sly, tortuous build up suggested might be in the offing.
Cortex may not be perfect, it
may not be comfortable, but it is
still a film that is well worth seeing, an entertaining, spine-chilling
variation on that much-loved mainstay of French cinema, the polar.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Nicolas Boukhrief film:
La Confession (2017)
Film Synopsis
When Charles Boyer, a retired police officer, begins to show signs of
Alzheimer's disease, he decides to put himself in the care of a
specialist clinic. At least he will no longer be a burden to his son
Thomas, who has problems of his own. Within a short time of
Charles's arrival at the clinic, several of his fellow inmates die,
suddenly and apparently without reason. Charles immediately
suspects that someone in the clinic is killing the inmates and begins
his own investigation. Unfortunately, his memory has now
deteriorated to the point where he can hardly tell what is real and
what is imaginary. Is it possible that he could be imagining the
whole thing...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.