Film Review
Avant-garde director Arnaud Desplechin followed his acclaimed short film
La
Vie des mortswith this remarkable and very distinctive psychological thriller,
which owes much to the novels of John Le Carré.
Desplechin is one a handful of directors in the past few decades who has brought an unusual artistic vision
and genuinely original feel to the thriller genre, adding an unsettling psychological
dimension which evokes Cold War paranoia whilst exploring personal obsession and insecurity.
The mood of
La Sentinelle - rated
as Desplechin's best film to date - is relentlessly sombre and includes some
stomach-churningly macabre dissection sequences; it is certainly not a film for the squeamish.
Much of the film's power lies in its unusual narrative style and creepily voyeuristic
photography, but it also owes a lot to Emmanuel Salinger's darkly introspective
performance. Each of these elements so naturally evokes the works of Dostoeivski
and Kafka, particularly in their portrayal of one man's withdrawal from the world around
him and his descent into manic obsession.
The film is as much a portrait of contemporary
student life - albeit in a rather elitist circle - as it is a conspiracy thriller.
Indeed, one of the reasons why the film has such an impact is because it switches seamlessly
from the world of the familiar to the world of the distinctly unfamiliar, occasionally
catching us off guard and shocking us with images which appear, at first glance, surreal,
until they assume a frightening reality.
The pacing is typical of French cinema
- languorous and unhurried - yet it manages to hold our attention; a potential
spectator should not be put off by its long runtime (the film is about thirty percent
longer than the average American thriller). The film is also far more character-oriented
than most thrillers, and for much of the film there doesn't seem to be much of a
plot to speak of. The drama is skilfully held in check and the tension isn't
released until the last few minutes when, in true thriller fashion, all the plot's
many story strands suddenly coalesce with an almighty ‘thud' and everything
is resolved. Or is it…? There's a beautiful ambiguity about the
film's ending which leaves a chilling aftertaste, of the kind you only really get
when reading a particularly good spy novel.
La
Sentinelle was nominated for (but failed to get) the Palme d'Or at Cannes
in 1992 and also received nominations for three Césars in 1993. Whilst the
film failed to win Césars for the Best Original Script and Best First Work, it
did win the Most Promising Young Actor award for Emmanuel Salinger. Arnaud Desplechin
reassembled much of the cast of this film for his subsequent work,
Comment je me suis disputé... (ma vie sexuelle)
, released in 1996.
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Arnaud Desplechin film:
Comment je me suis disputé... (ma vie sexuelle) (1996)
Film Synopsis
Mathias, the son of diplomat in Berlin, is about to begin his training as a pathologist
in Paris. Whilst crossing the Franco-German border on a train, he is singled out
and harassed by customs officials. On his arrival in Paris, he is shocked to discover
a mummified head in his luggage. Intrigued by the mystery, Mathias starts to use
his skills to analyse the head and discovers that it belongs to a recently deceased Westerner.
At the same time, he attempts to integrate with his fellow students, many of whom appear
to have connections with the security services. Unwittingly, Mathias finds himself
the instrument in a deadly vendetta between a former agent, Bleicher, and a man who assisted
Soviet scientists in crossing the Iron Curtain.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.