Film Review
One family's struggle to survive against indomitable odds is the
subject of this idiosyncratic debut feature from director Ursula Meier,
one-time assistant to Alain Tanner and the author of several short
films and documentaries. Straddling the boundary between realism
and surrealism,
Home is one
of those rare films that tacitly defy categorisation, an odd
mélange of psycho-drama and black comedy that is a
simultaneously compelling and unsettling portrait of a family in
crisis.
Home can be
interpreted both as a paean to individualism and an attack on man's
relentless rape of his environment, but what it is really about is how
an ordinary family unit copes with an external threat.
Meier has described her film as an inverted road movie. The
characters do not undergo a physical journey, but rather an internal
one, although it is nonetheless a road (a busy motorway) which provides
the stimulus for the journey. At the start of the film, we see a
model family enjoying an idyllic existence, far from the madding
crowd. It is a picture of paradise, with children happily playing
on an abandoned stretch of road whilst the adults live a calm, ordered
existence, without a care in the world. But then, with the
shrieking brutality of a wartime invasion, this bucolic harmony is
suddenly ripped to shreds and the family's heaven on Earth becomes the
nearest thing to Hell, as the highway beside their house is opened for
business.
As the family struggles to acclimatise to the unremitting barrage of
noise and pollution that comes their way, it isn't long before the
tensions between the family members, which were just discernible before
the motorway opened, swell to epic proportions. In a brave
but doomed attempt to hold the family together, the father (Olivier
Gourmet) bricks up all the windows and transforms the house into a
wartime bunker, but this merely heightens the intra-family
conflict. The more the family retreats from the world around
them, the more they cease to be a cohesive unit, and it is only a
matter of time before their self-destructive withdrawal drives them
apart for good.
Despite its somewhat artificial premise,
Home is a convincing and perceptive
examination of a family struggling to hold itself together against a
seemingly insuperable threat, a Swiss Family Robinson for our
time. Ursula Meier's imaginative screenplay and direction are
superbly complemented by Agnès Godard's evocative cinematography
and compelling performances from a talented ensemble cast, headed by
Isabelle Huppert. As the slightly creepy mother who appears
perversely impelled to drive her family to destruction, the latter
provides not only the focal point for the drama but also a metaphor for
our eco conscience, that part of us which (as we happily burn up the
kerosene on the fast lane in our gas guzzling four-by-four) sheds a
tear for mankind's unstoppable plunder of the natural world.
Ending on a wry note of optimism,
Home
offers a glimmer of hope for the future, hope that one day man
will tame his penchant for destruction and learn to appreciate the
beauty of nature, instead of covering it with tar and cement. (As if.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Marthe, Michel and their three children have been living in perfect harmony
for ten years. Their house is in the most peaceful spot, miles from
anywhere beside a stretch of motorway that was never completed. Then,
one day, without warning, work on the road suddenly resumes. The noise
is deafening, the pollution unbearable, but Marthe and her family are absolutely
adamant that they will not move. Even when the road is completed and
cars come whizzing past their homestead at the rate of a hundred a minute
the family's resolution to stay put remains intact. Adapting to these
changed circumstances is proving to be a challenge, but whilst they may have
lost their little corner of paradise Marthe and her family have no intention
of being driven from the house that has become their home...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.