Film Review
Director José Alcala garnered widespread critical acclaim with his first
film
Alex (2005), an austere
realist portrait of a young woman trying to come to grips with
something of an existential crisis. Alcala's second film covers
similar territory but adopts a far bleaker tone as it follows a
disillusioned woman police officer on a personal odyssey that will
inevitably end in either redemption or destruction. An
uncomfortable melange of social realist drama and modern film noir
thriller,
Coup d'éclat
serves as both a compelling study in obsession and a pretty damning
indictment of contemporary France, particularly in relation to how
immigrants are neglected by the state and exploited by criminals.
The film is set in the southern French port of Sète, a town with
a high immigrant population which previously served as the location of Abdel
Kechiche's acclaimed
La Graine et le mulet
(2007). In stark contrast
to Kechiche's sunny portrayal, the Mediterranean town looks like
something that has barely survived the Apocalypse when viewed
through José Alcala's cynical, noir-tinted lens. The
forlorn shipyard,
derelict factories and rundown neighbourhoods all suggest a society
that is sinking irreversibly into physical and moral decay. It is
a landscape of
despair that not only provides a fitting hyper-realist backdrop for the
drama but also pricks our collective conscience, reminding us that on
the margins of our supposedly affluent, well-ordered society there are
extremes of poverty and neglect that we can scarcely imagine.
Catherine Frot is surprisingly well-cast in the lead role, that of the
world-weary cop Fabienne who decides to go off on a personal crusade
(risking both her job prospects and her life in the process) when she wakes up to the
fact that hunting illegal immigrants is not the most rewarding of
careers. Frot is still better known for her comedy portrayals but
her arresting and nuanced performance in this film may well
alter this perception forever. The abject bleakness that we see
around Fabienne, evoked by the grim urban settings and the almost total
lack of compassion and empathy that people show towards one another,
seems to reflect the inner wilderness that Frot projects. There
are allusions to past catastrophes in Fabienne's life, but we are never
quite sure what brought her to the state she is now in, locked in a
solitary self-destructive Hell, her only solace being one glass of wine
too many at the end of an unbearably trying day. Frot's portrayal
of Fabienne is as cold and prickly as the world she inhabits, but there
is also a shard of humanity that compels us to engage with her, in
spite of her abruptness and tendency to melancholic introspection.
Coup d'éclat probably
works better as a social realist drama than a traditional
policier. Despite Catherine Frot's gripping performance and
Alcala's assured mise-en-scène, the film does struggle a little
to keep its thriller elements from collapsing under the weight of their
own artifice. Some weaknesses in the script cause the film to
slip into cliché and caricature periodically, and the unsubtle
plot contrivances are hard to overlook. These failings are
however largely countered by the film's artistic strengths, in
particular its biting realism (which is evidently Alcala's forte) and a
carefully sustained mood of oppression (which lies somewhere between
Kafka and Simenon), to say nothing of Frot's remarkable
contribution.
Coup
d'éclat is a dark and brooding piece, in which a severe
case of mid-life crisis is brought into brutal collision with the grim
realities of immigration and urban deprivation. Not a comfortable
ride, but a worthwhile one.
© James Travers 2011
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Film Synopsis
In the French town of Sète, police chief Fabienne Bourrier
spends much of her time pursuing illegal immigrants from all
backgrounds. Her professional routine is disrupted by the death
of a young prostitute named Olga, an obvious suicide case.
Fabienne becomes interested when she learns that Olga had a son and was
being hunted by someone. Driven by a compassion that even
takes her by surprise, Fabienne sets out to look for the missing child...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.