Film Review
The fetid, mist-shrouded swamps of the Deep South carry an unmistakable
stench of moral decay in Bertrand Tavernier's most recent crime drama,
an inspired adaptation of a novel by the celebrated American crime
writer James Lee Burke.
In the
Electric Mist (a.k.a.
Dans la
brume électrique) may be Tavernier's first film to be
shot in the United States but the distinguished French filmmaker has
already demonstrated his affinity for American culture, via his book
Amis américains, in which he
interviews several leading lights of Hollywood, and his two film
tributes to American jazz,
Mississippi
Blues (1983) and
'Round
Midnight (1986). Tavernier has been a particular devotee
of James Lee Burke's work for many years, so the making of
In the Electric Mist was the
fulfilment of a long-held personal ambition. It is his first
crime film since
L'Appât (1995), one of
the most provocative French films of the 1990s. Although it was
filmed in the state of Louisiana with a predominantly American
cast and crew,
In the Electric Mist was
an entirely French financed production and did not get a theatrical
release in the United States (it went to DVD straight after its
premiere in the spring of 2009).
Burke's 1993 novel
In the Electric
Mist with Confederate Dead is faithfully rendered by Tavernier
but is given a characteristically French policier slant, allowing the
director to revisit his favourite themes (racial intolerance and abuse
of power by authority figures) whilst making it more of a psychological
study than a conventional plot-driven crime drama. The film has
an unmistakeable political resonance, touching on the Bush
administration's appalling handling of the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina, which did little to alleviate an unimaginable level of human
suffering whilst allowing hundreds of millions of dollars in aid and reconstruction money
to be siphoned off by the Mafia. In both its crime-riddled
setting and morally ambiguous central protagonist, there is a close
similarity with Tavernier's previous (and arguably greatest) film
Coup
de torchon (1980), which is also adapted from an American
crime novel (one by Jim Thompson).
In the Electric Mist may have
the look and feel of a modern film noir thriller, but it is far from
being a conventional crime drama. The details of the plot are
vague and the exposition pretty messy for the most part, but this
hardly matters. Tavernier's main interest is not the humdrum
mechanics of a murder investigation but the psychology of the central
character. Dave Robicheaux is a cop who seems to have the most
tenuous grip on reality. Not only does he appear to have an
ethical deficit (planting incriminating evidence and beating up
suspects is all part of his daily routine); he looks as if he is
teetering on the brink of total mental collapse. Caught up in a
spiral of depression and alcohol dependency, he appears emotionally
disconnected from the world around him and burdened by an
irreconcilable guilt for past mistakes. Tommy Lee Jones's
arresting portrayal of Robicheaux is far from sympathetic but the
character fascinates us - a haunted solitary figure living on the edge
of reason and acting like an avenging angel in a world that no longer
has any moral sense.
With the connivance of his talented cinematographer Bruno de Keyzer,
Tavernier conjures up an oppressive dreamlike experience that shows us
the world as Robicheaux sees it: a rough nightmare reality in which
danger and evil lurk in every corner, and where virtue is continually
threatened, like a delicate blossom in a weed-infested garden. As
his mental condition deteriorates, Robicheaux loses the ability to
distinguish real experiences from imaginary ones. His
conversations with a confederate general from the American Civil War
are as real to him as his violent confrontations with local mobster
Julius Balboni. So heavily does Robicheaux's past impinge on his
present that he can no longer tell them apart. His real challenge
is not the apprehension of a psychopathic killer, but the battle he
must fight against himself as he strives to preserve his sanity and
endow his lacklustre existence with some meaning.
In his most unsettling film to date, Bertrand Tavernier sends us on an
uncomfortable journey into some very dark places and prompts us to
reflect on some deep moral issues. As in his previous crime
films,
Le Juge et l'assassin (1976),
Coup de torchon (1980) and
L.627 (1992),
we are left wondering whether there can ever be a place for ethical
restraint in the fight against crime. Should we feel safer in the
knowledge that there are people like Dave Robicheaux to protect us, or
should we be profoundly worried? If lowly cops are permitted to
play fast and loose with the law, what is to prevent others higher
up in the legislative food chain from doing the same? Before you
know it, we might even have our elected leaders thinking they can get
away with making up evidence to justify a totally pointless and unjustifiable
war. It's a slippery slope that leads to Hell...
© James Travers 2012
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Next Bertrand Tavernier film:
La Princesse de Montpensier (2010)
Film Synopsis
In the Louisiana town of New Iberia, maverick cop Dave Robicheaux is on
the trail of a serial killer whose victims are all vulnerable young
women. Shortly after visiting the scene of the latest brutal
murder, Robicheaux runs into Elrod Sykes, a famous Hollywood actor who
is making a film in the area, financed by the local crime boss Julius
Balboni. Sykes draws Robicheaux's attention to a decomposing body
that he found in a swamp, the body of a black man in chains.
Robicheaux recalls an incident that he witnessed in his youth and
becomes obsessed with uncovering the identity of the dead man and how
he came to die. As he does so, he comes ever closer to the serial
killer, who poses a far greater threat than he imagines...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.