Film Review
One of France's leading avant-garde filmmakers, Claire Denis is
becoming more impenetrable with every film she makes. She
followed the supremely distasteful vampire oddity that was
Trouble
Every Day (2001) with the equally mystifying
Vendredi
soir (2002), a film that apparently glorifies the one-night
stand. Denis's next film,
L'Intrus
trumps both of these in its visual artistry and
frustrating lack of cohesion.
As a purely visual experience,
L'Intrus
is quite remarkable. The haunting location photography
makes this a potent study in solitude and estrangement. Dreams
and reality crossover into one another so that we can never be sure
which is which, or indeed if anything we see is real. The film's
abstract nature allows the spectator to read into it whatever he or she
chooses, but loosely speaking the film appears to be about man's
inability to feel at one with the world in which he lives. He is
always an outsider, an intruder in paradise - at least that is one
possible interpretation of the film's title.
This is not an easy film to watch, however. Its generous two-hour
runtime and its complete lack of anything resembling a plot place great
strains on the spectator's patience and concentration. Despite
the beautiful images that award-winning cinematographer Agnès
Godard treats us to,
L'Intrus
feels aimless and ultimately unsatisfying. It is hard to identify
with the film's leading protagonist (Michel Subor), who is a tad too
egoistical and saturnine to be remotely likeable, and the lack of clues
as to what the film is about is as off-putting as it is
liberating. You will either love this film or hate it.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Claire Denis film:
35 rhums (2008)
Film Synopsis
Sixty-something Louis Trebor lives a hermit-like existence in the Jura
mountains, his only companions being his two dogs. He finds it
hard to communicate with his estranged son, Sidney, who lives with his
own family on the Swiss border. After a heart transplant, Louis
acquires a sudden jolt of wanderlust. He leaves his native France
and heads off to the South Pacific, in search of his lost past...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.