Film Review
After a brief digression which allowed him to get to grips with the
last days of François Mitterand and his Armenian roots -
Le Promeneur du champ de Mars
(2005) and
Le Voyage en Arménie
(2006) - director Robert Guédiguian returns to his home town of
Marseilles for his first genre film, a slick film noir which is endowed
with a valuable moral for our time. With the traditional French
polar enjoying something of a comeback in recent years,
Guédiguian effectively exploits the mechanics of this most
well-worn of genres to deliver a compelling and thought-provoking drama
that will surely have mainstream appeal, and not just in France.
The backdrop to this film is modern Marseilles, but a Marseilles that
could not be further from the sun-drenched port that is seen in the
director's previous films. The inter-weaving of oppressive nocturnal
sequences with daytime scenes filmed in a muted palette of cold greys, blues
and browns amply conveys the desolation that haunts the three main
protagonists and threatens to engulf them as they are drawn ever further
down the dark path of a deadly personal vendetta. For Robert
Guédiguian's darkest and cruellest exploration of human nature
to date, the film noir aesthetic is entirely appropriate.
Once again, Guédiguian is able to call upon the services of his
loyal troupe of actors, Ariane Ascaride, Gérard Meylan and
Jean-Pierre Darroussin, all perfectly suited to their roles and all
delivering a performance of the highest calibre. The rapport
which the three actors have now built up (having worked together on ten
of Guédiguian's films) serves the film well, not only bolstering
its sense of reality but also making it easier for the spectator
to engage with the three main characters. The taciturn and aloof
Meylan makes an effective counterpoint to the more impulsive and
expressive Darroussin; whilst the former is clearly reluctant to return
to his rebellious youth, the latter evidently relishes the
opportunity, but soon realises the extent of his delusion. The
darkly contemplative Ascaride remains an enigma right up until the
film's shocking denouement, where the pieces of the intricately crafted
puzzle come crashing together and effectively resolve the
mystery. Such is the power of Ascaride's performance that, in
this searing moment of revelation, you feel the full force of her
character's emotions and are impelled to feel what she feels as she
comes to terms with the extent of her folly.
Each of Robert Guédiguian's films has a carefully honed social
or political message, and this one is no exception. Without
labouring the point to the extent that it gets in the way of the
narrative,
Lady Jane exposes
the futility of vengeance, showing us that nothing good can come from
slavish adherance to the old philosophy of seeking an eye for an
eye. In the film's powerful and beautifully rendered climax,
where an understandably overwrought mother is brought face to face with
her son's murderer, we are confronted with the utter meaningless of
revenge, persuaded that one crime can never just another. It is
only when Muriel (Ascaride) sees the truth of this and realises that
she is empowered to end this cycle of despair and can at last rid
herself of the corrosive darkness that has blighted her life. Far
better to make a fresh start in living sunlight than to go on
rehearsing the misfortunes of the past in a dead night that can never
end.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Robert Guédiguian film:
L'Armée du crime (2009)
Film Synopsis
In 1960s Marseilles, three tearaway adolescents - Muriel,
François and René - make a dishonest living by selling
stolen fur coats. They call a sudden end to their criminal
exploits when they kill a jeweller and decide never to see each other
again. Many years later, Muriel is the proud owner of a posh
boutique named
Lady Jane.
Her life could not be better - until one day her son is
kidnapped. Unable to pay the ransom demanded by the kidnappers,
she has no choice but to call upon the help of her childhood friends
François and René...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.