Film Review
Feux rouges is another highly
recommended film from the talented and provocative director
Cédric Kahn, bearing some striking similarities with his earlier
Roberto
Succo (2000). Both films are what might loosely be
termed
existentialist road movie
thrillers, in which the central character is driven by an
uncontrollable self-destructive impulse into an increasingly darker and
deeper private Hell from which there is seemingly no escape. In
contrast to the extreme nihilist bleakness of
Robert Succo,
Feux rouges is a somewhat lighter
film, with a deceptively banal storyline and some oddly surreal moments
which make you ponder whether it is intended to be a black comedy.
This is certainly Cédric Kahn's most unpredictable and
unsettling film to date, mainly because it blurs the boundaries between
objective reality and subjective experience, to the extent that nothing
is to be taken at face value. Despite its threadbare plot and
minimalist design - most of the story takes place in the front of a car
-
Feux rouges is a thoroughly
compelling work. This is partly down to Kahn's slick
mise-en-scène (which seems to owe a great deal to Hitchcock and
other great thriller directors), but much of the credit goes to
Jean-Pierre Darroussin, who turns in the most intense performance,
and his cinematographer Patrick Blossier, whose work is both
beautiful and strangely chilling.
There is a searing truth to Darroussin's darkly introspective
portrayal of a neurotic man anticipating the break-up of his marriage
and the collapse of his world. Whilst this hardly makes for
comfortable viewing, the film exerts a tight vice-like grip that compels us to
keep watching, to see just where Antoine's physical and metaphysical
journey into Hell will end up. A dark and fascinating film, and
probably the most inspired adaptation of a Georges Simenon novel to
date.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Cédric Kahn film:
L'Avion (2005)
Film Synopsis
At the start of a busy weekend on the roads, stressed insurance agent
Antoine and his wife Hélène set out from Paris to collect
their two children from a holiday colony in the south-west of
France. Almost immediately, the couple are at each other's
throats. Hélène is annoyed that Antoine has
been drinking, and Antoine suspects his wife may be seeing another
man. After a heated argument, Hélène threatens to
continue the journey alone if Antoine stops for another drink.
Antoine calls her bluff, but when he returns to his car after a quick
call to a bar, his wife has disappeared. Seized by panic, he
hurries off to try to find her. His nightmare has only just
begun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.