Film Review
In
Le Lieu du crime director
André Téchiné tackles one of his favourite themes,
a bourgeois family disintegrating under the pressure of internal and
external forces. As in his subsequent films -
Ma saison préférée
(1993) and
La Fille du RER (2009) - the
ordered existence of the protagonists is soon revealed to be a shallow
delusion, a fragile edifice of deceit built on dangerously repressed
desires primed to collapse when the appropriate trigger comes
along. The ploy of a dangerous disconnect between a
pretence of outward conformity and inner confusion is central to
Téchiné's oeuvre and is most potently expressed in
Le Lieu du crime, one of his most
personal and darkest films.
In the second of her collaborations with André
Téchiné (after the equally compelling
Hôtel des Amériques,
1981), Catherine Deneuve is perfectly suited for the lead role and,
visibly at home in the part, turns in one of her finest
performances. The untimely death of the actress's former lover,
François Truffaut in October 1984, had come as a shock and was a
factor in her decision to take a year-long break from acting. On
her return to cinema in 1986, Deneuve seems to have acquired a greater
maturity and appears better equipped to take on more difficult roles,
such as the ones Téchiné would consistently write for her
over the following decades. The most important element of
Le Lieu du crime is the fraught
relationship between the emotionally repressed mother, Lili (Deneuve),
and her totally mixed up 13-year-old son Thomas (Nicolas
Giraudi). Both characters seem incapable of expressing their true
feelings for one another and appear afraid, if not resentful, of the
intense bond that connects them. Beautifully restrained
performances from both actors make this the essential dark core of the
drama, around which the other narrative elements are elegantly draped,
like fine robes on a decomposing corpse.
Le Lieu du crime may well have
been written to showcase the talents of Catherine Deneuve, or at least
give her the opportunity to prove herself as a serious dramatic
actress, but it is a well-constructed drama that owes as much to its
plethora of interesting, well-developed secondary characters. The
admirable supporting cast includes Danielle Darrieux (once again happy
to play Deneuve's dowdy mother), Victor Lanoux, Claire Nebout and a
strikingly photogenic Wadeck Stanczak. Téchiné was
assisted on his screenwriting by Pascal Bonitzer and Olivier Assayas,
who would become important auteur filmmakers in their own right, and
such is the quality of the script that every character in the film is
convincing and darkly fascinating.
Whilst not strictly a film noir,
Le
Lieu du crime does borrow a pivotal noir
device, the notion of entrapment, which is marvellously evoked by the
constantly roving camera which seems to imprison the characters in
their unfulfilled lives. There is not a character in the film who is
not cruelly confined by circumstances beyond his or her control.
Martin - the escaped convict to whom Deneuve's character, Lili, is
inexplicably drawn - swaps a physical prison cell for a
psychological one, as he becomes racked by guilt for murdering his
accomplice. Try as she might, Lili cannot tear herself away from
the ex-husband who still dotes on her and languishes in an emotional
prison. Thomas, the neglected son, has come to regard his
boarding school as a prison which he fantasises will one day be blown
up.
Only Lili's elderly mother (Darrieux) seems willing to accept the sham
order of her existence, but there is something intensely tragic about
her attempts to hold the family unit together with fancy cuisine and
freshly picked cherries. In the memorable post-Communion dinner
scene, the camera spins around the family members like a sorceress
attempting to bind them together with invisible threads - in
vain. Order is achieved only after the storm has broken, when the
protagonists have been set free and are able to embrace a life founded
on truer instincts than flawed middleclass morality. But, even
then, you can't help wondering if they are about to exchange one prison
for another. Freedom is, sad to say, the greatest illusion of all.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next André Téchiné film:
Les Innocents (1987)
Film Synopsis
In rural France, a 13 year old boy, Thomas, runs into an escaped
convict who orders him to return with some money. Thomas is on
holiday from the boarding school he loathes and is staying with his
mother Lili after her recent divorce from his father Maurice.
After an awkward encounter with his mother, Thomas manages to extort
some money from his grandfather and fearfully returns to the
convict. This time, the latter, a young man named Luc, is not
alone - and his accomplice wants to kill the boy. Luc saves
Thomas by killing his partner. Later, Luc strays into the
riverside bar run by Thomas's mother and immediately attracts her
attention. Lili finds Luc a hotel where he can spend the night
and quickly realises that she has fallen in love with him.
Unfortunately, Luc's former girlfriend Alice soon appears on the
scene...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.