Film Review
There's nothing like a long hot spell to bring out the worst in people
and in his latest film,
Coup de chaud,
director Raphaël Jacoulot shows just what an ugly thing human
nature can be when the mercury climbs too high in a seemingly idyllic
French village. In his third, most disturbing film yet, Jacoulot
combines the social realist aspect of his debut feature
Barrage (2006) with the noir-tinted
mystery trappings of the glacial thriller that came next,
Avant
l'aube (2011), the result being a film that resonates as an
astute allegory of France's present day 'blame it all on the
immigrants' malaise. It is one of the sorrier aspects of the
human condition, this tendency to seek out easy scapegoats and
attribute all of society's ills to a visible, widely reviled minority,
and it is with a kind of morbid relish that Jacoulot re-examines the
theme he broached it in his previous film
Coup de chaud is a film which,
like
Avant l'aube, hums with
a peculiarly oppressive atmosphere that is more than vaguely
reminiscent of what we encounter in Claude Chabrol's darker thrillers. The gradually
escalating sense of hysteria that spreads among the inhabitants of a
peaceful rural community, like a forest fire, builds the tension to a
suitably grim climax, the hysteria being driven by nothing more than a
collective mistrust of an outsider, the idiot son of a gypsy, Josef
Bousou. At first, we are inclined to side with the
villagers. Josef is a frightening individual, a perpetual infant
lacking in adult inhibition, made more frightening by the fact that his
face is permanently set in a vacuous doll-like expression with the eyes
of a demonically possessed child. Yet, weird though he appears,
there is nothing in Josef's behaviour to suggest he is dangerous.
His actions are more childish than malevolent, but the villagers see
him as a threat, their prejudice further aggravated when he gets too
intimate with a local girl and the community water pump goes missing.
The perspective alters dramatically in the film's second half and we
suddenly find ourselves siding with Josef, the misunderstood clown who
ends up being cast as the local bogeyman. The film owes this
remarkable turn-around to its central performance from Karim Leklou,
impressive in his first lead role after making his presence felt in a
smaller part in Rebecca Zlotowski's
Grand
central (2013). In what feels like a reworking of Mary
Shelley's
Frankenstein story,
Leklou first unnerves us as the retarded 30-something who develops into
a monster, and then genuinely engages our sympathies when the whole
village turns against him and deals with him in a far from humane way.
At one point, it looks as if the villagers are conspiring to rid the
world of an invasion of marrauding aliens, not one mentally handicapped
young man.
Intense performances from a strong cast that includes Jean-Pierre
Darroussin, Grégory Gadebois and Carole Franck, showing
intolerance at its most brazen and repellent, more than adequately
complement Leklou's attention-grabbing central turn as the unfortunate
who ends up as the sacrificial victim for a community that refuses to
look back on itself and see where its real problems lie.
Coup de chaud is not only a
supremely well-crafted thriller, it is also a dark and eloquent
commentary on our times.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
At the height of a scorching hot summer, the calm of a small French
village is disturbed by Josef Bousou, a mischievous thirty-year old who
has the mental age of a small child. The villagers have long had
to endure Josef's infantile antics but, as the temperature sores, their
patience is exhausted. When the community water pump goes
missing, Josef is immediately blamed for its disappearance. It
seems inevitable that the disturbed young man should end up being
killed, but which of the villagers would be pushed so far as to commit
murder...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.