Film Review
One of the inevitable consequences of the 2008 banking crisis was the veritable
tsunami of books and films that came out in its wake, a molten hot venting
of opprobrium and moral indignation that made the reaction to the Enron
scandal look like a storm in a microscopic thimble. With his left-leaning
sympathies and obvious loathing for those who misuse power for their own
ends (apparent in the films that make up the bulk of his impressive filmography)
Costa-Gavras was bound to get in on the act, but rather than indulge in yet
another po-faced round of banker-bashing he takes a more sardonic approach,
inviting us to pity, rather than censure, the irresponsible greed merchants
who go about the business of driving the world economy in the manner of a
teenage joy-rider who has no concept of the word 'tomorrow'. Costa-Gavras
appears to be mellowing in his old age.
Interestingly,
Le Capital was adapted from a novel (by Stéphane
Osmont) that was published four years
before the 2008 financial crisis.
As prophetic as it is scathing, the book (which takes its title from Karl
Marx's famous treatise
Das Kapital) offers some lurid insights into
the world of high finance, which Costa-Gavras turns into bleak and sometimes
flippant satire in his film. Here, there is the same condemnatory voice
of the director's previous politically engaged films -
Z (1969),
L'Aveu (1970),
Missing (1982),
Amen. (2002) - but the tone is noticeably
different, more tongue-in-cheek and indulgent. What Costa-Gavras appears
to be attacking is not the banking industry
per se, but the imperfect
capitalist system that allows it to get with what it does. The evil
lies not in the bankers, who end up looking like a bunch of childish prostitute-chasing
inadequates with serious monomania issues, but in the investors, who habitually
insist on a much greater rate of return than the world economy can bear.
The social consequences of corporate greed is a theme that Costa-Gavras has
already tackled (arguably far more imaginatively) in his pre-Credit Crunch
black comedy
Le Couperet (2005),
in which a sacked executive creates his own job agency so that he can attract
and kill all his rivals.
Le Capital doesn't have quite so fanciful
a plot but it does take us to the limits of caricature, with banking bosses
graphically portrayed as mutual back-stabbing students of Machiavelli, so
absorbed in their ludicrous game of wealth acquisition that they have totally
lost sight of what money is for. It's hard to tell these endlessly
game-playing saddos apart from those anaemic friendless adolescents who get
glued to their xBox consoles, so caught up in the thrill of an empty pursuit
that they have no life at all. It's not even a career - just a pointless
jumbling of numbers that has the side-effect of enriching one segment of
the world's population whilst impoverishing the other (greater) segment.
Le Capital is presented as a slick, modern thriller but it is really
an attempt to reinvent Jacobean tragedy as a Gallic black comedy (or possibly
vice versa). Several times in the course of the convoluted narrative,
the central protagonist - admirably portrayed by Gad Elmaleh in his first
major dramatic role - punctures the fourth wall and takes us into his confidence,
in the manner of a Shakespearean aside. There are shades of the Bard's
greatest tragedies -
Richard III,
Macbeth and
Hamlet
- in the political scheming and psychological duels that make up most of
the plot. In his portrayal of the hard-to-fathom banker overlord Marc
Tourneuil, Elmaleh has his work cut out trying to weave in the ruthlessness
of the crookback villain, the inner conflict of the Scottish usurper and
the vulnerability of the Danish prince. And this is the main problem
with the film: we haven't a clue what the central protagonist stands for,
let alone what his aim is. Is he the corrupted innocent or the cynical
opportunist? We never know, and this is what makes the film such uncomfortable
viewing - there are no moral certainties or easy conclusions. In a
world painted in stark black and white, Tourneuil remains frustratingly a
fluctuating shade of grey.
Whereas it is pretty clear in Costa-Gavras's previous political films what
the message is, in
Le Capital we are left somewhat perplexed.
Is this merely a playful rant directed against the banking fraternity or
is it something deeper - an invitation for us to look beyond the sideshow
of greedy bankers and see where the real problems lie, in the shaky foundations
on which our seemingly secure economic and social systems are based?
In his film, Costa-Gavras comes close to exonerating the vain and blinkered
moneymen who came frighteningly close to crashing the entire world economy
in 2008. They are not red-eyed monsters who eat widows and orphans
for breakfast, but mere children pathetically addicted to a peculiar form
of gambling. Who then are the ones we should revile, the ones who have
allowed a whacking great casino to be erected at the heart of our economic
system? The answer pops into your head as soon as
Le Capital has
run its merry course. It is us - we are the ones who help to spin the wheel
in the game of virtual roulette that will one day ruin us all.
Faites
vos jeux,
mesdames et messieurs.
Le
jeu continue!
© James Travers 2016
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Next Costa-Gavras film:
Compartiment tueurs (1965)
Film Synopsis
Marmande is the CEO of Phénix Bank, Europe's leading financial
institution. When he is diagnosed with testicular cancer, he immediately
appoints a rank outsider, Marc Tourneuil, as his acting successor.
Tourneuil's appointment comes as a surprise to the board of Phénix
- surely he is too young, too inexperienced, too gauche to take effective
control of the bank? But these are the very reasons why Marmande chose
him - someone who can be easily controlled and manipulated until a more suitable
long-term replacement can be found. Tourneuil turns out to be far less
malleable than Marmande had supposed and within days of taking up his new
post he has instigated a mass programme of redundancies that shore up his
position and send the bank's share price soaring. And yet there are
still many pitfalls ahead of him, and Tourneuil can never be sure who is
on his side and who is plotting his downfall. Dittmar Rigule, an American
hedge fund manager, makes him an offer he can hardly refuse but before he
knows it Tourneuil is drawn into an illegal scheme that will bring about
a collapse of the Phénix share price and make it vulnerable to a hostile
takeover. Torn between his ambition and his conscience, Marc Tourneuil
makes his move - but is it his salary or his soul that he intends
to save...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.