Film Review
The latest film from Belgian director Lucas Belvaux is this surprisingly effective mélange
of film noir thriller, comedy and social drama - an unusual combination of genres if ever
there was one. Belvaux had previously won acclaim for his 2002 thriller
Cavale (part of his celebrated 2002
Trilogy
), and it looks from this latest offering that this is the genre in which the director
is most adept. From the seductively sombre noir photography to the suspense-laden
action sequences, Belvaux shows the meticulous precision and attention to detail of other
masters of the policier genre (such as Jean-Pierre Melville and Jacques Deray).
Whilst references to earlier films abound, he also brings something new, a cruel touch
of irony that is a hair's breadth from self-mockery and farce. The vulnerability
and cackhandedness of his characters makes them endearingly realistic, but they also appear
downright comical, and there's something almost alarming about seeing such unpolished
misfits caught up in what is otherwise a pretty tough film.
The film is
slightly less successful as
a social drama - some of the ideas (such as a poor family pinning its hopes on winning
the lottery to buy a moped so that the mother doesn't have to take the bus to work) just
don't quite ring true. However, it does makes some worthy comments about the nature
of a society where individuals become so disenfranchised that they see crime as an easy
way out of their problems (an alternative to that other species of mass-delusion, the
National Lottery). The dehumanisation of society is brought home in the climactic
ending, where, like something out of George Orwell's "1984", combat police take control
like unthinking automata, machines imposed by an unfeeling state to keep the troublesome
proles in order. There's something mighty disturbing about a state which has far
greater willingness to spend money on policing its citizens than on finding them gainful
employment. All in all,
La Raison du plus faible
is an engaging and thought-provoking film - a well-constructed thriller that makes
a grimly pessimistic yet pretty accurate assessment of the fractured, morally bankrupt
world we now live in.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Lucas Belvaux film:
Rapt (2009)
Film Synopsis
Patrick, Robert and Jean-Pierre are three friends who pass their empty days playing cards,
unable to find work in the industrial Belgian town where they live. A newcomer,
Marc, joins their group. When the others learn that he has just been released from
prison, they are inspired to mount a hold-up. Having resolved to start a new life
for himself, Marc is at first reluctant to get involved, but finally he is persuaded to
offer his new friends the help they need to effect the robbery. It is something
he soon lives to regret...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.