Film Review
When a filmmaker turns the camera on himself and sets about trying to
analyse himself he risks becoming alienated from his audience and
labelled self-indulgent. Not so with François Ozon, who
delivers not only a revealing (and slightly malicious) self-portrait
with his latest film -
Dans la maison
(a.k.a.
In the House) - but
also an insightful meditation on the creative process and the extent to
which cinema is becoming a purely voyeuristic experience.
Taking his inspiration from a Spanish stage play
The Boy in the Back Row by Juan
Mayorga, Ozon constructs a darkly compelling psychological drama which
depicts the relationship between the artist and his audience as a kind
of mutually exploitative satanic pact. The film draws together
influences from Alfred Hitchcock (
Rear
Window) and Pier Paolo Pasolini (
Teorema)
and superficially resembles one of Claude Chabrol's later psychological
thrillers. Yet Ozon's dark humour and penchant for deception make
it something far more complex and disturbing.
Dans la maison is a maze-like hall
of mirrors where doubles and double meanings abound and where nothing,
absolutely nothing, it to be taken at face value. Ozon's
thirteenth film is a cinematic
trompe
l'oeil, his most interesting work to date, and arguably his most
accomplished so far.
The film revolves around the ambiguous relationship between a
disillusioned teacher, Germain Germain (Fabrice Luchini in his second
Ozon outing, after
Potiche), and a worryingly
androgynous sixteen-year old schoolboy, Claude Garcia (Ernst Umhauer,
remarkable in his first substantial screen role). Germain hardly
notices Claude until the day he reads an essay of his in which he
describes, in lurid detail, a visit to the house of a classmate,
Rapha. It is not clear what arouses Germain's interest more,
Claude's talent for observational prose or the sleazily erotic subtext
to what he has written, but the teacher can hardly wait to read the
next instalment of Claude's adventures chez Rapha. Claude appears
gratified by Germain's interest in him and willingly acquiesces to his
demands, and what develops is a variation on Faust's pact with the
Devil, although we can never be sure who is playing the role of
Mephistopheles and who is selling his soul (let alone what he hopes to
gain in return). Initially, it appears that Germain is the
predator with dark designs on his handsome star pupil, but it gradually
becomes apparent that it may well be Claude who is the manipulative
one, bent on playing a dangerously destructive game for his own
amusement.
At first, the line between reality and fantasy is clearly drawn.
The world that Claude describes is the most grotesque caricature of a
bourgeois family imaginable, with characters straight out of a tacky
American or British sitcom. The head of the household is as much a dope
as his son (a fact that is reinforced by their both having the same
first name) and the mother is a carbon copy of Flaubert's
Madame Bovary. They live in a
plush detached house that is so implausibly pristine that it looks like
an architect's model. Claude's intrusion into the household is an
obvious parody of Terence Stamp's incursion in Pier Paolo Pasolini's
Teorema (1968), and has a similar
outcome. The crudeness of what we see reflects Claude's lack of
maturity as a writer, but it provides a clear demarcation between the
real world of the teacher and the imaginary world of his pupil.
All that changes when, under Germain's influence, Claude revisits his
fantasy homestead and the barrier between reality and imagination
slowly begins to dissolve. This is when the films starts to
become deeply unsettling. Like Germain, we have allowed ourselves
to become trapped in the voyeuristic experience that has been shaped
according to our expectations. Ultimately, the joke is played out
and we realise that Claude is in fact Ozon himself, laughing at us
behind a mask of deceptive child-like innocence.
Dans la maison is by far the
most chilling of François Ozon's films, not because of what it
shows us, but because of what it implies. Of all the arts, cinema
is the most manipulative, the most absorbing and the most viscerally
stimulating - the one that offers the easiest escape from our everyday
normality. Like Germain (and his wife Jeanne, humorously played
by Kristin Scott Thomas), we all relish the prospect of climbing into
someone else's skin and living a completely different life, at no risk
to ourselves. Like it or not, we are all compulsive voyeurs by
nature, evidenced by the enduring popularity of film, novels and
Australian soap operas. But voyeurism can be a dangerous hobby,
it can become addictive and can diminish our ability to distinguish
real life from fantasy. We may even take on aspects of the
characters we read about or see on the screen and lose sight of our own
identity. The most disturbing aspect of Ozon's film is the way
that Claude's semi-fictional world becomes shaped by Germain's
expectations - what begins as a harmless fantasy in which the voyeur is
safely distanced from what he reads ends up as a nightmare in which
fact and fiction are intricately interlaced. Ozon's film invites
us to reflect on the extent to which we are already living in a
fabricated alternative reality that has been created for us by others,
whose motives for doing so are far from apparent. Not every
puppet master is as benign as François Ozon...
© James Travers 2012
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Next François Ozon film:
Jeune & jolie (2013)