Film Review
Six years after unleashing his idiosyncratic little thriller
Lemming
(2005) on the world, Dominik Moll makes a long overdue return to the
director's seat, with an altogether different kind of excursion into
unhinged fantasy. Set in 17th century Spain,
Le Moine is Moll's first departure
from the here and now and transports into a world that is terrifyingly
unfamiliar, one in which evil isn't just an idea but a tangible,
frighteningly real manifestation that roams the world looking for souls
to devour. Moll brings all his creative energies to bear on what
is his most ambitious film to date, but whilst the film is certainly
visually impressive it lacks substance and is ultimately deeply
unsatisfying. Despite the extravagance of its
mise-en-scène and occasional phantasmagorical flourishes,
Le Moine has nothing like the force
and shocking artistry of Ken Russell's similarly themed
The Devils (1971), one of the
(many) films from which Moll takes his inspiration.
Le Moine is closely based on
the
The Monk, a seminal work
in English Gothic literature written by Matthew G. Lewis, a 19-year-old
diplomat. When it was first published in 1796, Lewis's
blasphemous novel created a storm of controversy but it proved to be an
instant bestseller, paving the way for subsequent Gothic novels such as
Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein.
The first film adaptation of
The Monk,
directed by Adonis Kyrou and co-scripted by Luis Buñuel was
overshadowed by Russell's film when it was released in 1972.
Dominik Moll's version downplays some of the more lurid and sensational
aspects of Lewis's novel but still manages to be a potent evocation of
'English Gothic' at its most atmospheric and oppressively haunting.
With his long association with tough, action-oriented roles, Vincent
Cassel would seem to be an unlikely choice for the central protagonist,
the monk Ambrosio. Whilst Cassel struggles to be entirely
convincing as a man wedded to monastic life he nonetheless turns in a
compellingly introspective performance, one that conveys (far more
subtly than Moll's frenetic mise-en-scène) the inner struggle of
a man whose religious devotion is constantly assailed by earthy
desires. Ambrosio's corruption by Satan is palpably rendered but
Cassel's approximation to a truly great performance is undermined by
his director's unfortunate habit of overstatement. A mediocre
script doesn't help and pretty well scuppers any hope the supporting
cast may have had of distinguishing themselves.
Le Moine impresses most in its
first half, which is hard to fault. By combining the familiar
Gothic motifs with the distinctive thriller ambiance of his earlier
films, Moll succeeds in creating a mood of fearful expectancy, a
fanfare heralding the arrival of the Prince of Darkness. The
stark contrast between the suffocatingly gloomy monastery interior and
sun-drenched Spanish landscape outside provides the most potent visual
representation of the forces that govern the world, those of light and
darkness, good and evil. This comfortable dichotomy proves to be
a false one when we see what the pious followers of Christ get up to
within their convents and monasteries. Where the film is most
successful is in conveying the idea that evil is all-pervasive and
wears many guises. It is evil dressed up in Christian dogma that
compels a group of nuns to condemm one of their sisters to the most
gruesome of deaths. The Devil is a wily one, you cannot deny it.
Having created his chiaroscuro Gothic nightmare world so brilliantly
Moll smashes it to pieces with an ill-judged surfeit of style in the
film's second half. In an attempt to shore up a crumbling
narrative, Moll ends up drowning in a barely watchable whirlpool of
delirium as the main character stumbles and yields his soul to
Satan. Watching a talented filmmaker go completely off the rails
is never a pretty sight but here Dominik Moll seems to revel in
self-indulgence, blissfully unaware of the incoherent mess he is
serving up for his audience. Russell's film has its moments of
unbridled lunacy but there is a discipline, a guiding intellect behind
these that prevents them from puncturing the film's integrity.
Le Moine has no such discipline and
merely explodes like an over-inflated balloon, obliterating in an
instant what might so well have been Moll's masterpiece.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Dominik Moll film:
Des nouvelles de la planète Mars (2016)