Film Review
Demain dès l'aube is,
in a similar vein to director Denis Dercourt's previous film
La Tourneuse de pages (2006),
an ingeniously crafted study in obsession that is both chilling and
strangely hypnotic. Instead of a burning desire for revenge, this
time it is a morbid fascination with historical battles which takes
hold of the main protagonist and lures him into a dark world where he
becomes prey to his own self-destructive impulses. The film has
the same brooding atmosphere as Dercourt's last feature, the same eerie
dreamlike composition and unsettling character ambiguities, but it is
far more effective because it conveys more forcefully the dark
derangement that overtakes the main character as he slowly loses his
grip on reality, or rather exchanges one reality for another.
Vincent Perez, absent from French cinema for the last four years, makes
a magnificent return in the lead role of Mathieu. As the concert
pianist who, in the throes of midlife crisis, is tasked with rescuing
his younger brother from a dangerous addiction to Napoleonic war games,
Perez gives what is almost certainly his finest screen performance to
date. His is a haunting portrait of a man who, being of artistic
temperament and uncertain of his own identity, finds the prospect of an
alternative reality strangely alluring. He is a kind of modern
Orpheus who, to bring his younger brother back to reality, must enter
the dark and deadly place of the imagination, a place from which he may
not return. As he soon discovers, living in the past can be a
very dangerous occupation, particularly if you have a psychotic
character defect which makes it easy to overstep the bounds of reason.
Perez's co-star Jérémie Renier is just as impressive as
the younger brother who revels in his bizarre timeshare existence,
spending half of his time in present day France working in a depot and
the other half in the early 19th Century with his Napoleon-obsessed
buddies. Renier's portrayal complements Perez's
beautifully. Although Paul (Renier) may initially appear to be
the one who is in trouble, so absorbed is he in his war games that he
looks as if he can no longer distinguish between reality and fantasy,
it is actually Mathieu (Perez) whom we should be concerned about.
Whilst they take their games desperately seriously, Paul and his
friends still have one foot in the real world and know there is a
boundary that cannot be crossed. By contrast, Mathieu fails to
see this wall of reason and so he places himself and his brother in
ever greater danger as his Napoleonic playacting sets free a side of
his character that has been long suppressed.
Not only is
Demain dès l'aube
a far more satisfying and convincing study in obsession than the
somewhat overhyped
La Tourneuse de
pages, it is also a technically superior production.
Dercourt displays far more inventiveness in his mise-en-scène
and achieves a spine-chilling sense of reality, with the Napoleonic
sequences no less authentic than those set in the present day.
The film has a distinctive ambiance that subtly exposes the sinister
forces that lurk beneath the surface and allows the tension to build
slowly but surely to a truly gripping climax. Assisted by three
of French cinema's finest acting talents (we mustn't overlook
Aurélien Recoing, who is quite terrifying as the implacable
Capitaine Déprées), Dercourt delivers a stylish,
off-the-wall thriller that is as compelling as it is creepy.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Denis Dercourt film:
Les Cachetonneurs (1998)
Film Synopsis
Paul and Mathieu are two brothers who have both allowed themselves to
be overtaken by a childhood passion. Paul's obsession is
historical battles, Mathieu's is music. But whilst Mathieu has
made a successful career of his obsession and is now a world-class
pianist, Paul lives in a dream world, participating in authentic
re-enactments of Napoleonic battles. Concerned that Paul's hobby
may be taking a sinister turn, his bed-ridden mother implores his older
brother to make an attempt to bring him back to reality. The only
way that Mathieu can do this is by entering Paul's world...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.