Film Review
One of the most telling signs of the male menopause is a susceptibility
to scopophilia, a compulsive need to spy on others (usually those
endowed with youth and beauty) for sexual gratification. Now
comfortably into middle age, French director François Ozon may
or may not be suffering from the male menopause but his latest films
have taken an increasingly voyeuristic turn, the vicarious
fantasy-weaving of
Dans la maison (2012) giving
way to a male fantasy of a far more lurid and carnal kind in
Jeune & jolie, his fourteenth
full-length film. This time, the object of Ozon's salacious eye
is a stunningly beautiful 17-year-old girl, whose repeated deflowering
in front of the camera becomes so coldly mechanical that any erotic
impact is soon eradicated. What starts out as something
resembling a classic coming-of-age drama soon develops into something
far more disturbing, a considered meditation on the mystique of human
sexuality that sheds an interesting new light on Ozon's oeuvre, in
particular his early work.
In his early years as a filmmaker François Ozon was considered
an enfant terrible, his darkly comical studies involving transgression
of middleclass codes being provocative both in what they said and in
how they said it. Now a mature, widely respected filmmaker, Ozon
has lost his capacity to shock and provokes his audience in more subtle
ways, employing a less stylised approach to filmmaking as he tackles
themes of an increasingly complex nature.
Jeune & jolie is Ozon's most
restrained and ambiguous film to date, one that is crafted with such
elegance and fluidity that it is easy to miss the deeper truths that
lie beneath the placid surface. How today's adolescents are
perceived and judged by their elders is certainly one of the film's
main themes, the central irony being that those who now sit in
judgement were, in their youth, no better or worse than those they now
judge. However, its main theme is surely the elusive mystique of
sexuality, personified by Ozon as a 17-year-old prostitute who remains as
stubbornly opaque and mysterious as the French security services at the
time of the Algerian War.
In her first leading role Marine Vacth (first revealed in Cédric
Klapisch's
Ma part du gâteau, 2011)
instantly monopolises our attention as the enigmatic teenager Isabelle
(to the detriment of the excellent supporting cast Ozon gathers around
her, including a sumptuous Charlotte Rampling). A starkly
idealised representation of adolescent beauty, Vacth's character has a
presence that is at once alluring and unsettling. She is far too
aware of the power that her nascent sexuality has over others, and yet
she still exhibits the tender fragility of a little girl gazing in awe
at the adult world. In both his writing and his direction, Ozon
never allows us to get too close to Isabelle, and so she remains a
fiendishly insoluble paradox, and we never understand why she behaves
in the way she does. Like Catherine Deneuve's equally idealised
character in Buñuel's
Belle de jour (1967), her
motives for becoming a prostitute appear perverse and completely
unfathomable. Needing neither money nor sexual gratification, she
appears to be guided by some unseen hand, perhaps the same hand that
guides the bee to the flower and forces it to steal its precious nectar.
Each of the four segments into which the film is neatly divided (each
representing a season of one year) is accompanied by a song by
Françoise Hardy. This is not the first time Ozon has used
Hardy's music - it featured prominently in
Gouttes d'eau sur pierres brûlantes
(2000) and
8 femmes (2002) - and it shows
an uncanny synergy with his work, highlighting that melancholic sense
of yearning or loss that is so much a part of Ozon's film auteur
makeup. Ozon creates with his images pretty much what Hardy does
with her unmistakable voice, a need for something unattainable and
inexpressible.
Jeune &
jolie conveys this impression more potently that in any of the
director's previous films, and leaves you moved and troubled, in a way
that is impossible to put into words.
© James Travers 2013
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Next François Ozon film:
Une nouvelle amie (2014)
Film Synopsis
One summer, Isabelle, 16, is on holiday with her family on the French
Riviera. Encouraged by her hedonistic parents, she allows an
attractive young man to rob her of her virginity, but she takes no
pleasure in the experience and sees no real significance in it.
The following autumn, Isabelle, now 17, is a fully fledged Parisian
prostitute, although naturally she keeps this fact from her
parents. Between leaving school and returning to her comfortable
middleclass home, she arranges to meet up with her clients at various
hotels, clients she has no difficulty attracting over the
internet. Isabelle has no need of the money and appears to be an
intelligent, well-adjusted teenager. Yet the life of the
prostitute appeals to her, although she has yet to discover why...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.