Film Review
Having made something of a splash with his distinctive sci-fi thriller
Chrysalis (2007), director Julien
Leclercq ventures into more controversial territory with his latest
film, revisiting one of the most traumatic recent events in French
history - one that would be a chilling precursor of September 11th
2001. The hijacking of an Airbus-300 on Christmas Eve 1994
by armed Algerian Islamists
was to have a profound impact on the French psyche, just as the attack on the
Twin Towers in New York on that fateful day in 2001 would shake the
confidence of the American nation and leave deep scars that will endure
for many decades. Leclercq's film (a stylish action
romp that tries and fails to be something a little deeper) attempts to
piece together the fragmentary accounts of the 1994 hijacking, by
presenting those nervewracking three days from the point of view of the
unfortunate passengers and the members of France's counter-terrorist
police squad (the GIGN) who ultimately liberated them.
21 million people reputedly watched the dramatic Boxing Day rescue when
it was
televised live and broadcast to the four corners of the world in
1994.
It is highly unlikely that Leclercq will achieve anything like that size
of audience with his film. Coldly detached and pretty
uncompromising in its depiction of violence, the film is uncomfortable
to watch and it is far from certain what Leclercq's motivation was for
making it - was it to make us even more afraid about flying (thereby
helping us all to reduce our carbon footprint), or to reassure us that,
in the unlikely event that our plane will fall into the hands of armed
fanatics, a fearless band of gun-toting heroes will be sent in by the
French government to save us from certain death.
On the face of it
L'Assaut appears to be just
another cynically motivated appropriation of a real-life crisis for
commercial gain - but that doesn't prevent it from being an effective
action thriller. Taking his cue from Paul Greengrass's
United 93 (2006), one of the more
respectable screen re-enactments of the September 11th hijackings,
Leclercq goes for near-documentary realism (something which allows him
to seamlessly incorporate news footage of the real hijacking and GIGN
rescue) whilst imposing his own auteur stamp through the marvels
afforded by digital photography. In a conventional film drama,
Leclercq's manic addiction to zooming and stroboscopic effects would be
highly distracting. Here, they work surprisingly well, not only
heightening the drama, but also lending an oppressive dreamlike quality
to the film. The events we see played out on the screen -
particularly the superbly executed action denouement - seem to
transcend reality, they have the quality of a nightmare that is
struggling to permeate our consciousness. The greyed-out palette
(which Leclercq used so effectively on his previous film), virtually
monochrome in some scenes, adds to the sombre dreamlike feel of the
film, bringing a harrowing sense of confinement, which works
particularly well in the scenes in the aircraft interior. Far
from being distracting, the endlessly roving camera lens and frenetic
editing (techniques that are generally over-used in action films these
days) create a mood of trepidation and uncertainty and convey a starkly
visceral sense of what it is like to live through the traumatic events
depicted on the screen.
As the two heroic leads, Vincent Elbaz and Grégori
Derangère provide the human element that the film badly needs to
sustain it through its grim 90 minute sprint. Whilst virtually
all of the other protagonists are little more than stock caricatures,
badly drawn and unconvincingly played, Elbaz and Derangère both
succeed in making their characters believable; had this not been the
case, the final action sequence could never have been quite so tense
and involving. It is to be regretted that Leclercq fails to bring
as much depth to the other characters, particularly the Islamic
terrorists, who are reduced to being one-dimensional bogeymen.
The film has not the slightest intention of explaining why the
Islamists behave as they do - they are just dark-skinned madmen with
guns who patently deserve what they get. They might as well be
marauding aliens from a distant galaxy. Ten years on from
September 11th, one might have hoped for a slightly more nuanced
characterisation of Public Enemy Number One than this unintended homage
to comicbook-style villiany.
There is certainly much about
L'Assaut
that doesn't work, but equally (on the technical front primarily) there
is much to be impressed by. As is often the case with
inexperienced but talented filmmakers, Leclercq appears to be far more
interested in technique than in content. His flair for making a
strong visual statement is readily discernible, but so also is his lack of
maturity when it comes to presenting human feelings and
motivations.
L'Assaut
is one of those films which make an impact whilst on the screen
but leave you unsatisfied, and perhaps mildly resentful, afterwards.
Once he had seen the film, General
Favier, a member of the real GIGN team that was involved in freeing the
hostages, was encouraged by it and commented that it brought hope to
those who now live in fear of similar terrorist atrocities. By
failing to engage (even at the most superficial level) with the real
problem (just
why do
religious fundamentalists have to resort to mass murder?), I would
argue that the film is deeply depressing, a step back into the shadows
of ignorance and insecurity. It is now over a decade since the
terrible carnage of September 11th, but we seem to be not a jot wiser,
either in comprehending the hatred that is fuelling this new era of
terrorism or in how to deal with it. Leclercq's film - which
seems to conclude that we are all safe providing there is the political
will and sufficient gun power - serves merely to reinforce this
uncomforting impression.
© James Travers 2012
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