Film Review
After
Repulsion (1965) and
Rosemary's
Baby (1968), director Roman Polanski completed his trilogy
of films about social isolation and paranoia with
The Tenant (a.k.a.
Le Locataire) in 1974, an inspired
adaptation of a novel by Roland Topor. In essence, all three
films tell the same story - that of a seemingly well-balanced
individual, a loner with well-buried psychotic problems, who is driven
to insanity as a consequence of a growing suspicion of those around him
or her. Of these three films,
Rosemary's
Baby is the most chilling because it muddies the water between
psychological breakdown and demonic influences and deals with some
terrifying concepts, such as devil worship and Satanic
impregnation. By contrast,
The Tenant is a more understated
and prosaic work, but it is still deeply unsettling in its depiction
of a man who is slowly going out of his mind. The fact that
Polanski himself plays the lead character in this film is revealing -
perhaps by portraying a man in mental anguish he sought to confront, if
not exorcise, his own personal demons. As would become apparent
when he later made
The Pianist, Polanski was
indeed a man with a troubled past, someone with good reason for being
slightly paranoid and mistrustful of others.
Whilst
The Tenant may lack
the coherence and sustained visual power of
Repulsion and
Rosemary's Baby, it is nonetheless
an intensely compelling film, crafted with Polanski's usual panache,
eccentricity and delicious dark humour. The first half of the
film is virtually faultless. With the skill of a master
storyteller, Polanski draws us into the world of his ill-fated hero and
prepares us for the nightmarish intrigue that lies ahead. Anyone
who has rented an apartment will sympathise with Trelkovsky's
situation. Who hasn't at some point in his life had to put up with
unsociable or downright hostile neighbours? Polanski develops
this familiar experience in two ways, interweaving black comedy with
psychological thriller. Before you know it we are in the midst of
some kind of mad Kafkaesque fantasy in which the central character has
lost the ability to communicate and suspects everyone around him of
plotting his destruction.
It is only when we are well into the second half of the film that
Polanski starts to lose the plot, presumably along with most of his
audience. When Trelkovsky finally flips the film immediately
loses its focus and its credibility. The problem that Polanski
has set himself is practically an impossible one, namely to deliver a
subjective impression of insanity (from the point of view of the
madman) that is convincing to an audience that is, by and large, compos
mentis. The distorted images that Polanski presents us with, flittering
chaotically between the real and the surreal, don't quite cut the
mustard, and the end result is more embarrassingly comical than
frightening. Whilst the film does not end as gracefully as other
Roman Polasnki films, the experience it offers is overall pretty
unsettling, enough to put you off renting for life.
© James Travers 2004
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Next Roman Polanski film:
Tess (1979)
Film Synopsis
Trelkovsky is a shy office clerk who is about to take up residence in
an old apartment block in Paris. When he learns that the previous
tenant tried to kill herself by jumping from an upstairs window, he
feels compelled to visit her in hospital. At the bedside of the
dying woman he meets Stella, an attractive young woman who claims to be
her friend. Returning to his apartment, Trelkovsky is warned by
his landlord not to make any noise during the night. The tenant
does everything he can to oblige but still his neighbours continue to
treat him with contempt and hostility. Then he starts to notice
some bizarre things. He sees the other tenants standing
motionless in the toilet room opposite his apartment. He finds a
tooth concealed in a hole in the wall. And he becomes fascinated
by the dead woman's clothes in the wardrobe. Trelkovsky is now
convinced that his neighbours are determined to kill him by driving him
insane, and that Stella is in on the act...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.