Film Review
Photographer and occasional actor Raphaël Neal makes a promising
directing debut with this idiosyncratic crime drama loosely based on a
novel of the same title by Leslie Kaplan. The 'Crime and
Punishent' conceit that kicks off the narrative quickly develops into
something of much wider social significance as
Fever forces us to contemplate
humanity's innate disposition to evil, freely referencing Nietzsche's
Thus Spake Zarathustra and Hannah
Arendt's
Eichmann in Jerusalem
as it does so. It's clearly a more cerebral kind of crime drama than
your average mainstream cinema audience would be prepared to sit
through but in spite of its somewhat heavy-going philosophising Neal's
first feature is a strangely compelling work. Helped by an
ethereal score supplied by the pop singer Camille,
Fever draws you in with its creepy
atmosphere and contemplative study on the nature of guilt and evil.
If the plot sounds familiar that is probably because it has
considerable common ground with Hitchcock's film
Rope (1948),
adapted from a play by Patrick Hamilton which was in turn based on the
true story of two philosophy students - Nathan Leopold and
Richard Loeb - who cold-bloodedly executed a fourteen-year-old boy in
1920s Chicago. In a similar vein, Neal's film revolves around two
students who believe they can commit a guilt-free murder, but rather
than being driven to the hangman's noose by an unsympathetic James
Stewart they become an object of fascination for a totally mixed-up
bystander, in the form of Julie-Marie Parementier. The latter's
crisis of identity results in all three characters being forced into
confronting some dark truths about themselves and human nature in
general, leading inevitably to a bleak contemplation of the Holocaust
and the banality of evil
Stimulating though it is,
Fever
suffers from the classic problem that all films tackling meaty subjects
are prone to, which is that it has insufficient space and time to cover
the ground it clearly wants to. If this were a novel,
Raphaël Neal would have had the freedom to develop his ideas more
fully and arrive at some satisfying conclusion, but the constraints of
the feature film force him to skate on the surface and merely hint at
the profound depths he is dying to plunge himself and his audience
into. A lot of ground is covered but too much is left unsaid, so
whilst the film pricks the conscience and fires the imagination, it
leaves us struggling to fill in the gaps and work out what exactly its
author is trying to say.
For a first film,
Fever has
much going for it - first and foremost some slick and imaginative
direction which effectively conceals the fact that the film was made on
a shoestring. As the two Nietzschen leads Martin Loizillon and
Pierre Mourre are eerily compelling, both actors bringing a sinister
yet tender edge to their on-screen rapport which carries more than a
hint of homoeroticism (one of several allusions to Hitchcock's
film). No less fascinating is Julie-Marie Parementier's
Zoé, the third character in a perverse triangle, one that is
presumably intended to symbolise that dark part of each one of us which
draws us to evil like moth to a flame. Enigmatic performances and
some canny mise-en-scène by a first-time director with great
promise redeem a film that risks being smothered by its intellectual
pretensions. Dostoyevsky, Nietzsche and Arendt - it's quite a lot
to take in, but mercifully Neal sticks to the edited highlights.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Damien and Pierre, two gifted high school students living in
Paris, wonder if it is possible to feel guilt if you commit a random
killing. Just a few weeks before their end of school exams, they
test their ideas by murdering a woman they just happen to come across
in the street. It might have been the perfect crime, had it not
been for the fact that a young woman named Zoé caught sight of
them on leaving the apartment block where the murder was
committed. Zoé's interest in the crime soon develops into
a full-blown obsession just as Damien and Pierre begin to take in the
enormity of the act they have committed...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.