Film Review
After the disappointingly vague and incoherent
Twentynine Palms (2003), director
Bruno Dumont showed a welcome return to form with
Flandres, a bleakly expressionistic
work in which the worst failings of human nature are exposed like
rotting blood-encrusted carcasses on a butcher's shelf. Many
critics hailed this as a masterpiece and few were surprised when it won
the Grand Jury Prize at Cannes in 2006. Released at a time when
two ill-advised and seemingly doomed military adventures were being
pursued by the West,
Flandres offers a timely reflection on the
futility and corrupting influence of warfare.
Dumont first revealed his flair for incisive, thought-provoking and
darkly captivating cinema in his controversial 1997 social drama
La
Vie de Jésus, which he followed up with his equally
sobering
L'Humanité (1999).
These two films and
Flandres
very nearly form a trilogy, in which the social disintegration, moral
vacuity and lack of individual fulfilment in our materialistic
post-industrial era are explored with uncompromising realism and an
unmistakable sense of despair.
Flandres
departs somewhat from the trenchant realism of Dumont's first two films,
although it still shows the director's penchant for stark naturalism.
There is a chilling dream-like quality to this film which is evident in
both of its raw, visually arresting settings: a grim, rain-sodden area
of countryside in northern France and a torrid desert battle zone,
presumably Iraq or Afghanistan. The subtle stylisation of the war
scenes somehow renders these more viscerally shocking than if Dumont
had gone for a more conventional approach, and the impact of these
scenes goes way beyond the usual anti-war statement.
The film shows us that what we think of as civilisation is in fact no
more than a mocking charade, a dressing screen to hide our shame.
Beneath the surface of so-called propriety, the savage lurks, hiding
its true nature with powder and perfume. Whatever we may think,
bestial aggression is an inescapable component of the human
condition. Given the appropriate stimuli, the right set of
circumstances, the animal side of our nature is sure to emerge, eager
to sate its hungry appetite for lust and blood. You only have to
subject yourself to one installment of the
Jerry Springer Show to realise the
truth of this.
Flandres is by no means an
easy film to watch. The nature of its subject and Dumont's
unflinchingly cold, austere approach will doubtless scare off many
viewers, who will be driven even deeper into their comfort zone of
reassuringly bland and puerile mainstream pap,
to be spared such unsettling images as the killing of child soldiers, violent rape and
revenge castration. But for those with
the stamina for this kind of challenging cinematic ordeal,
Flandres is a bold and alluring masterwork that will
leave a lasting impression, causing you to reflect long and hard on
what kind of creature we really are.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Bruno Dumont film:
Hadewijch (2009)
Film Synopsis
Somewhere in the depths of rural Flanders, a young farmer named Demester
is pursuing a torrid love affair with an attractive woman of his own age,
Barbe. It doesn't seem to bother Demester when his lover takes an interest
in another man, Blondel. The day comes when Demester and his rival are
called up for military service in a far away foreign country, to fight a
war about which they know little and about which they care even less.
Like others in their predicament, both men are looking forward to the adventure
that lies ahead, but it isn't long before the grim reality of war hits home.
In no time at all Demester and Blondel are altered beyond recognition, changed
into merciless brutes who revel in the power that they have to dispense death
and cruelty wherever they see fit. Unaware of how her two lovers are
being corrupted by the violence of war, Barbe languishes in a state of increasing
anxiety at home. Influenced by the images she sees on the television
screen she imagines all manner of horrors being endured by the unfortunate
soldiers. To her, they are lambs to the slaughter; in reality they
have become murderous wolves, overtaken by the blood lust...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.