Film Review
Ten years after his idiosyncratic debut feature
Les Revenants (2004) Robin
Campillo returns to the director's seat for a second film constructed
as an immigration-themed fable. In the interim, Campillo has not
been idle - he has been busy working as a screenwriter and editor for
Laurent Cantet on such films as
Entre les murs (2008) and
Foxfire (2012). Whilst it has
an obvious connection with Campillo's first film,
Eastern Boys is a considerably more
satisfying piece of cinema, more subtle in its treatment of its
underlying social themes and constructed with far more artistry and
daring. It is a film that tempts rather than seduces, with a
hazy, fractured narrative and characters that remain opaque throughout,
defying us to sympathise with them. Campillo's dark exploration
of the male psyche is part existential voyage of discovery, part
twisted love story, but, like
Les
Revenants, it is predominantly a bleak commentary on a society
that is ill at ease with itself and prone to a kind of intellectual
zombification brought about by materialistic self-interest and moral
cowardice.
Eastern Boys is essentially a
zombie film in reverse. The opening scene set in the Gare du Nord
reminds us of the mall sequences in George A. Romero's
Dawn of the Dead (1978), with
soulless hoards milling about without purpose or hope. When we
first meet him, the main protagonist Daniel (magnificently played by
Olivier Rabourdin) is not too far removed from your average
flesh-eating zombie, a non-person who breaks the monotony of his
'living dead' bourgeois existence by preying on vulnerable young men who
are willing to sell their bodies for the price of a croissant.
The predator becomes the victim when his prey turns up with his own
zombie-like entourage and begin their own feeding frenzy, which
involves pillaging an apartment's worth of expensive consumer goods
(another sly nod to Romero's film). In these dazzling first two
acts none of the characters appears to have any trace of humanity and
none of them engages our sympathy. What the film foists upon us
is a grotesque parody of modern capitalism, the strong casually
exploiting the weak for the most tawdry of motives.
It is not until the film's third act that something resembling genuine
human feeling enters the frame. The process of de-zombification
(i.e. humanisation) begins when Daniel sees pretty boy Marek not just
as an object for his own gratification but as someone with whom he can
engage with at a deeper level - a lover, a friend, perhaps even a
substitute son. It is Daniel's emotional involvement with
Marek that redeems him and enables him to free himself from the
straitjacket of indifference to the plight of others. It is not
hard to see the allegory beneath this loosely constructed drama, one
that invites us to cast a more humane eye over our prejudices about
immigration.
Captivating both with its artistry and pertinence,
Eastern Boys stands a good chance
of being the most significant French film of 2014. The
performances and script are first rate, each investing the film with a
sobering reality, but what impresses most is the bravura quality of
Robin Campillo's mise-en-scène, beautifully supported by Jeanne
Lapoirie's alluring photography. There is an elegance to this
film that is intoxicating, with images melded together with an almost
mathematical precision. The one stand out sequence is the scene
in which the main character allows himself to be fleeced in his
apartment by a gang of implausibly photogenic East Europeans. A
scene that should have the brutality of a gang rape ends up resembling
a dreamlike orgy, lyrically sensual. The weird poetry of this scene is forcefully inverted in
the dramatic final act of the film, a heartstopping finale in which
Daniel lives up to his name as he beards the East European lions in their
lair. Just when 2014 was shaping up to be a dull year for French
cinema, Robin Campillo livens things up no end with this inspired and
gutsy assault on our social conscience.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Marek, an illegal immigrant from the Ukraine, is hanging about at the
Gare du Nord with his mates when he catches the attention of
40-something Daniel. Admitting that he is willing to do anything
for cash, Marek accepts the latter's invitation to his comfortable
Paris appartment. But Daniel gets more than he bargained for when
the handsome youngster turns up on his doorstep with his gang of East
European petty criminals. Helpless, Daniel can only watch as
Marek's friends help themselves to his possessions. The next day,
he is surprised when Marek shows up again, alone and apparently willing
to conclude their business arrangement. The last thing Daniel
expected to happen was to fall in love...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.