Film Review
With his extreme nihilistic debut shocker
Seul
contre tous (1998), Argentinean born director Gaspar Noé was both reviled
and praised in almost equal measure for his outrageously provocative approach to filmmaking.
In his subsequent full-length film,
Irréversible, he mounts the cinematic
equivalent of a terrorist coup, taking his cinema audience hostage and subjecting them
to ninety minutes of the most gratuitously horrific and degrading material his warped
artistic genius could conceive. The film is as brilliant as it is flawed, something
which has divided critics as much as its undeniably shocking content.
Irréversible
is literally the kind of film most sane, well-adjusted people can only watch once,
but the experience - for good or for bad - is one that will linger forever.
Irréversible is not a film for the faint hearted. It has been condemned
with an almost religious fervour in some quarters for the uncompromising violence shown
in its first half. And perhaps deservedly so, since this consists of a man having
his head beaten to pulp before our eyes and a seemingly interminable rape scene.
Both of these sequences are traumatic to sit through and have prompted many reviewers
to question Noé's motives - is he simply using extreme violence as a device to
earn himself a notoriety which his artistic talent alone could not win him? The
rape scene is particularly troubling, mainly because of the way it is filmed, in a single
take with a totally static camera - a striking contrast to the frantic camera movements
used in the film's first frenzied twenty minutes or so. Whereas other directors
have attempted to portray the horror of rape through clever cinematography and sharp editing,
Noé simply forces us to sit and watch the event from the perspective of a passive
observer - it is totally sick, yet also harrowingly effective. You may question
Noé's intent, but there's no denying that this particular
enfant terrible
knows what he is doing.
Another point of controversy is the film's reversed narrative structure. The film
begins with the horrific denouement of a tragic story and then relates the events which
led up to this, in a series of episodes each lasting about ten minutes. Whilst this
is one technique Noé cannot be credited with having invented - the same idea was
used much more effectively by Christopher Nolan in his masterful suspense drama
Memento
(2000)
- it is employed to great effect and does show that there are viable
alternatives to the conventional narrative approach. Here, Noé justifies
using the reverse narrative by cleverly provoking us to constantly reappraise what we
have seen on the basis of what we subsequently learn. The film begins at the
story's chronological end, with the aftermath of an uncontrollable orgy of bloodlust,
and then explains why this had to happen. Inevitably, the conventional character
development runs in reverse, which is a truly bizarre experience as characters who initially
appear utterly loathsome gradually evolve into rather likeable individuals.
Noé is challenging his audience at so many different levels, often at the same
time, and perhaps he is expecting too much. The images of nihilistic destruction
are just too shocking, the cinematography just too frenzied, that it is a struggle for
even the most tolerant of spectators to rise to Noé's bait and make any kind of
contact with the film's doomed protagonists. Those who are not put off by the director's
artistic excesses will be alarmed at how easily they are seduced into altering their viewpoint
as the film progresses. If the film has any moral justification it is here, as it
shows us that our view of the world is fundamentally influenced by what we know of it.
The more we know, then, perhaps, the greater will be our compassion and our willingness
to forgive. It's a pity that Noé felt he had to go to such extreme lengths
to make such a simple point, assuming that this was his objective.
Whether you can stomach its content or not, it is hard to deny that
Irréversible
has a stunning visual feel, and in this respect it is one of the most original films
to have been made in the last decade. The manically swirling, totally disorientating
camera movements, accompanied by a chilling rhythmic soundtrack, make the shocking sequence
in the gay bar an experience you are unlikely ever to forget - an awesome yet irresistible
descent into the lower reaches of Hell. The film's other strong selling point
is its set of lead actors, Monica Bellucci, Vincent Cassel and Albert Dupontel, each of
whom merits a host of awards for their participation in the film. The film's later
sequences with Belluci and Cassel (who are married in real-life) show a totally unexpected
tenderness - a tenderness which is rendered unimaginably traumatic by what we have previously
witnessed. Maybe it pays not to know the future after all.
Whilst
Irréversible merits its acclaim for the breathtaking daring and originality
shown in its cinematography and narrative form, it is equally worthy of pillorying in
other areas. The dialogue - which was largely improvised - is generally atrocious,
making some of the latter sequences in the film feel unbearably slow and uninspired.
It should also be said that much of the dialogue is sickeningly politically incorrect,
reinforcing the (probably incorrect) impression that Noé is on some kind of homophobic
crusade ("gay bar equals Hell" whilst the "lovey-dovey heterosexual bedroom equates
to Heaven" is how some have interpreted the film). There are also a few faults
in the film's narrative structure. The film's opening prologue - involving a repulsively
nude Philippe Nahon reminiscing on his life - feels horribly unnecessary, serving no apparent
purpose. The film's ending (or, if you prefer, the origin of its narrative) is so
clumsily abstract that it is both unfathomable and ridiculous. And the strobe effect
at the very end of the film was presumably intended to prevent epileptics from watching
the film - why?
As in his earlier works, Noé's technical brilliance is undermined by a lack of
two essential qualities: artistic self-restraint and respect for his audience. Excess
in one area seems to be employed to cover paucity of creativity in another, and there
is absolutely no sense that Noé cares how an audience might react to his films.
There is also an irksome tendency for the pretentious (illustrated by the glib "Time destroys
all" phrase which Noé attaches to
Irréversible in an unnecessary
attempt at sloppy Wittgenstein-style exposition). If you were not one of the vast
majority of spectators who were driven away by the film's shocking content and dizzying
visuals, the chances are that you left with the impression that, whilst the film made
its mark, it offers rather an empty cinematic experience. If Gaspar Noé manages
to retain his ability to shock and impress with his technical inventiveness and, at the
same time, take on subjects with depth and meaning without completely alienating his cinema
audience, he stands a good chance of being judged as one of French cinema's great creative
talents.
© James Travers 2004
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Next Gaspar Noé film:
Love (2015)