Film Review
Swiss director Lionel Baier has a reputation for making quirky films on
off-the-beaten-path subjects but his latest film,
La Vanité, is his weirdest
yet, one that will doubtless polarise audiences and critics with its
playfully absurdist treatment of a subject that remains practically a
no-go area for filmmakers - assisted suicide. Stéphane
Brizé recently broached this sensitive matter in a more
respectful manner in his lowkey drama
Quelques heures de printemps
(2012), but Baier's cheeky comedy somehow invites a deeper reflection
on the controversial "right to die" issue. It's a provocative and
audacious film, perhaps slightly less well-judged than Baier's previous
work -
Garçon stupide (2004),
Les Grandes Ondes (à l'ouest)
(2013) - but it is one that hits home with its brazenly off-kilter
approach to what could well be one of the most important moral concerns
of the next decade.
Vanitatum, omnia vanitas -
"vanities, all is vanity". As the title implies Baier intended
his film to be a
Vanitas, a
piece of art expressing the emptiness of life. The worth or
otherwise of mortal existence is what the three central characters in
the film are faced with when the Fates (or rather a pair of
screenwriters with a very peculiar sense of humour) bring them together
in a motel bedroom for a spot of impromptu euthanasia. These
three could hardly be more different - one is a proud old architect who
is resolved to die with dignity, the second is a woman who assumes the
responsibility of helping the first on his way (for her own, not
entirely virtuous, motives), and the third is an athletic male
prostitute who likes a good time but abhors complications. The
only thing that these three have in common is that they each harbour a
stack of secrets which will come out into the open in the course of
their bizarre shared journey towards death's threshold.
By confining virtually the entire film to one cramped location - a
dreary motel bedroom which can hardly fail to evoke Hitchcock's
Pyscho
(one of many sly references for the eager-eyed) - Baier gives it an
artificiality that not only heightens the comedy but also makes the
characters and their developing relationship appear more
tangible. In this respect, the film is greatly assisted by the
colourful yet authentic performances from the three leads - Patrick
Lapp (who featured in the director's last film), Carmen Maura
(best-known for her frequent appearances in Pedro Almodóvar's
films) and dishy newcomer Ivan Georgiev. The format that Baier
employs is that of Jean-Paul Sartre's play
Huis
clos (which appropriately translates as
No Exit in English) - the one with
the famous line "Hell is other people" - i.e. throw three ill-matched
people into a room and see what develops. What develops in
Baier's cutely idiosyncratic film is an original and thoughtful
meditation on the value of human life and, more crucially, whether an
individual has the right to choose the time of his death.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
David Miller is a retired architect afflicted with an inoperable cancer
who has made up his mind to die. To that end, he contacts an
association in Switzerland that offers an assisted suicide service and
arranges a time and a place for the event to take place. The
venue is an anonymous motel on the outskirts of Lausanne, which David
checks into to await the arrival of Espe, a woman of about his own age
who will help him to accomplish his final act. Espe isn't as
au fait with the procedure as her
client would have liked and a complication arises when David discovers
that, under Swiss law, his suicide will only be accepted as such if it
is witnessed by another person. So, enter Tréplev, a
Russian male prostitute from the room next door who is far from happy
about being drawn into what looks like a sordid death pact. Just
when everything is arranged for David to carry out his intentions some
unexpected developments interrupt the proceedings...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.