Film Review
Ursula Meier's eagerly awaited follow up to her weirdly idiosyncratic
debut feature
Home (2008) is another
cinematic oddity offering a surprisingly effective mix of social
realism, family drama and modern fable.
L'Enfant d'en haut (a.k.a.
Sister) may lack the zany personal
touch of Meier's incomparable first film but it is just as
well-crafted, nuanced and engaging, a worthy recipient of the Silver
Bear Special Prize at the 2012 Berlin Film Festival. Not only is
the film a poignant character piece, centred on a young boy whose
intense craving for affection and status leads him into a life of
crime, it is also a thoughtful commentary on the vast economic gulf
that splits our society today and on the way that money can poison relationships.
After his memorable screen debut in
Home
and subsequent portrayal of Serge Gainsbourg as a child in Joann Sfar's
Gainsbourg (Vie héroïque)
(2010), Kacey Mottet Klein takes centre stage in Meier's latest film
and leaves us in no doubt that he is a star in the making.
Klein's arresting portrayal of the complex 12-year-old Simon is
striking in its depth and naturalism. We can easily latch onto
the fragility, the desperate need for love, that the youngster
struggles to conceal beneath a touchingly forced pretence of adult
bravado. This is most apparent in a moving scene in which the boy
tries and fails to wheedle his way into the affection of a friendly
English tourist (played by Gillian Anderson, of
X-Files fame). Whilst we
cannot help but engage with Simon, we struggle to find anything to like
in his sister, portrayed just as convincingly by Léa
Seydoux. Louise has little to redeem her - she is a wild young
woman who has almost given up and ends up being completely dependent on
her brother. (We do not find out what became of their parents
until late in the film.) The siblings' ambiguous relationship
takes a darker turn when Simon realises how much power he has over his
sister and sees that, contrary to the old song, money can buy you
love. What then ensues is as cruel a psychodrama as you can
imagine.
The film's two locations provide a stark visual metaphor for the
unbridgeable gulf that exists between the two strata of society, the
haves and the have nots. The first half of the film is set mainly
in the pristine snowy mountains overlooking a poor Swiss town.
Here, wealthy tourists amuse themselves in what looks like a fairytale
setting, frolicking in the sun and the snow, without a care in the
world. They are like the aristocrats of pre-revolutionary France,
blissfully unaware of the misery and squalor that lies unseen at their
feet. How we delight in the ease with which little Simon sneaks
into their playground like a Dickensian urchin and helps himself to
their designer goggles and skis. The contrast with the world that
Simon comes from could hardly be greater - a concrete wasteland of car
parks and tower blocks, filling the valley at the foot of the mountains
like so much human detritus. This is the depressing world we are
plunged into after our jaunt in the sunny uplands, a place where hope
is as scarce as money, and a skiing holiday is a concept that is beyond
the comprehension of most people who live here.
It is hardly an original metaphor - the rich in their lofty haven, the
poor in their stinking gutter - but it provides an effective framework
on which Ursula Meier can develop her probing character study about two
very different souls - the boy who yearns desperately for love and the
older sister who becomes completely dependent on him.
Agnès Godard's beautiful near-documentary photography not only
stresses the physical disconnection between the two contrasting
locations, it also exposes the profound emotional disconnection between
Simon and his sister, who at times appear as distant from one another
as the fancy ski resort and the grim housing estate on which they
live.
L'Enfant d'en haut
may not be as quirky as
Home,
and its ending certainly isn't as satisfying, but it is nonetheless a
mature and intensely humane piece of filmmaking. It is with eager
anticipation that we look forward to Ursula Meier's next film.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
One winter, Simon, an enterprising 12 year old, makes good use of the
cable car that connects the industrial town where he lives with his
sister Louise and the opulent ski resort that overlooks it. From
the latter he steals skiing equipment from wealthy tourists which he
then sells, at a profit, in his town. Having lost her job, Louise
finds that she is becoming increasingly dependent on her little brother...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.