Film Review
Director Eugène Green's third feature is a haunting meditation
on the connection between art and life that somehow manages to be both
alluring and jarring, an idiosyncratic film-poem that abounds with
mystique and mischief. Developing the exaggerated formalism
of his debut feature,
Toutes les
nuits (2001) (which won the Prix Louis Delluc for first film),
Green has his actors delivering all of their lines in a flat,
emotionless register (à la Bresson), sometimes directly into the
camera, and adopts a rigid style of mise-en-scène that would
seem to be more at home in the theatre than on a cinema screen.
The self-conscious stylisation and formal structuring of the film into
well-defined acts gives it a distinctly Nouvelle Vague feel, which is
greatly assisted by Adrien Michaux's more than vague resemblance to
Jean-Pierre Léaud. Green's main claim to fame is that he
led a revival of French baroque theatre technique in the late 1970s, so
it is no accident that the word that best encapsulates his unique style
of cinema is 'baroque'.
Le Pont des Arts was clearly
never conceived as a crowdpleaser but it risks alienating even
committed art house audiences with its overblown pretensions, cockeyed
attempts at humour and surfeit of borrowed (or semi-borrowed)
techniques. In a cast of supremely talented actors, Olivier
Gourmet comes off worst and appears frankly ridiculous in a scene in
which he acts out a scene from Racine's
Phèdre as a prelude to
seducing a prospective protégé. This histrionic
equivalent of a sadistic outbreak of piles is very nearly surpassed by
Denis Podalydès's truly cringe-worthy impersonation of a
psychotically cruel chorus master, complete with a phoney English
accident which requires him to preface every utterance with the
exclamation "Oh!", because (apparently) this is the way the English
intelligentsia speak. Oh.
Mercifully, it is only when the film tries to be funny that it becomes
unbearable. For the most part,
Le
Pont des Arts is an eerily beguiling piece that successfully
wraps the aesthetics of baroque theatre around a very modern play that
sees various disparate individuals struggling to comprehend the meaning
of existence. Those (few) scenes where the film comes dangerously
close to the abyss are forgiven when it takes on a more serious hue and
draws us into the fractured realities of the two main protagonists, who
are played to perfection by Adrien Michaux and Natacha
Régnier. Régnier has never appeared more beautiful,
nor more fragile, than she does here and has an almost ethereal
presence that befits her between-worlds character. Her character
transcends life and death, and becomes a kind of soul in transit, a
perpetual resonance on the fabric of creation, like the Monteverdi
madrigal (
Le Lamento della ninfa)
she sings with such feeling. With his fay persona and aura of
gentle nihilism, Michaux makes the perfect Orpheus to Régnier's
Eurydice in what is soon revealed to be a modern retelling of the
ancient Greek myth. The closing sequence, in which Michaux and
Régnier encounter one another on the Parisian bridge of the
film's title, has such power and poignancy that it at once elevates the
work to a higher plain and helps to redeem the film's earlier detours
towards the intolerably grotesque.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
Christine and Pascal are two arts students at the university of Paris
in the late 1970s. Their harmonious relationship falls apart when
Christine begins nagging Pascal for not taking his studies
seriously. Sarah, a young singer with a baroque ensemble, lives
with her partner, Manuel, a computer programmer. Noticing how sensitive
Sarah is to criticism, Manuel tries to console her when she falls foul
of her tyrannical chorus master, an opinionated fiend known as The
Unnameable. Dismissed from the ensemble, Sarah decides to take
her own life. Pascal is also driven to suicide but when he hears
a recording of Sarah's voice he is pulled back from the brink...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.