Film Review
Claire Simon's follow-up to
Les Bureaux de Dieu (2008)
offers a similar unconventional blend of documentary and fictional
drama, this time set within the throbbing environs of the Gare du Nord
in Paris. On the fictional side, Simon throws in a handful of
disparate characters for whom the station becomes more than just a
transit point - hard-up student Ismaël, health-conscious
university professor Mathilde, busy estate agent Joan and a man
looking for his missing daughter, Sacha. These are not just
players in their own personal dramas, they also become involved in
their surroundings and it is through their eyes that we see the real
life of Europe's busiest railway station, not just the people who pass
through in their hundreds of thousands each day, but also those who
make their living on the crowded concourse.
Gare du Nord is an innovative
and exuberant piece of filmmaking but it is not without its
faults. If Simon's objective was to capture the essence of the
location as authentically as possible you wonder why she didn't just
opt for the pure documentary approach, merely filming what is there
rather than going for a less satisfying half-way-house which is neither
fiction nor documentary. The stilted dialogue and awkwardly
self-conscious performances from the non-professional cast members soon
become irksome, and these, together with the inclusion of some fanciful
(and fantastic) interludes, rob the film of the
sur-le-vif authenticity that its
author is presumably striving for.
The film's increasingly unfocused second half fails to live up to the
promise of the first half and drags somewhat as the fiction and
documentary fail to gel into a satisfactory whole. On the plus
side, there's a vertiginous spontaneity to the chalk-and-cheese
encounter between Nicole Garcia and Reda Kateb (neither actor has given
a more true-to-life performance) and their scenes - humane and funny in
equal measure - add substance to what is on the whole a fairly
insubstantial film. The star of the film ends up being the
station itself, which, far from
being a static backdrop, becomes a living entity, the pulsating heart
of Europe's transport system.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
The Gare du Nord in Paris is a place where anything can happen.
Every day, Ismaël, a student, is fascinated by this constantly busy
station. It is here that he sees Mathilde, a history
professor several years his senior, for the first time. Gradually, they
fall in love. They then
meet up with Sacha and Joan. Sacha is looking for his missing
daughter; Joan feels she spends most of her life in this station as she
shuttles back and forth between Lille, London and Paris. The Gare
du Nord is a strange, almost mystical place, that is traversed by all manner of people -
commuters, immigrants, holidaymakers, even ghosts...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.