Film Review
Director Robert Guédiguian takes a break from the sunny French port of
Marseilles, the setting of most of his films to date, and heads east to
the former Soviet state of Armenia. There, joined by his stalwart
associates Ariane Ascaride and Gérard Meylan, he embarks on a
curious odyssey which is part road movie, part documentary-style
portrait of life in a country which is in the throes of making the painful transition from
Communist control to Western-style liberalism. It's a surprising
departure for a filmmaker whose work so far, whilst varied in tone and
subject matter, has a rare coherence to it, by virtue of its predominantly
Provençal location and underlying socialist themes.
Le Voyage en Arménie is, however,
not so different from what has gone before. Guédiguian's
penchant for crafting true-to-life vignettes is as recognisable here
as it is in any of his other films, as is his unmistakable concern
with his fellow man. Anna's reaction to what she encounters on her
journey echoes how little understanding those in the more affluent West
have of the daily ordeal experienced by most ordinary people in the
countries of the former Soviet Union. As a supposedly intelligent and educated woman
she should have anticipated that young girls are driven to prostitution to survive,
that gangland criminality is rampant, and that policing is pretty well
non-existent. And yet we, the spectators of Anna's rude awakening,
are just as surprised by what we see. It's another world that Guédiguian shows us
- brutal, unjust and archaic - yet at the same time he shows us something of the beauty
of the country and its people.
As in several of his earlier films, Guédiguian manages to combine
several genres, although perhaps less successfully than previously. The
thriller elements seem to have been shoe-horned into the narrative almost
as an after-thought and
serve to undermine the film's trenchant realism. Surely it isn't necessary for Anna to
become personally involved with gangster activity for her to realise
how dangerous Armenia can be? This and other glaring plot contrivances do
weaken the film's impact to some degree, but so potent and sincere is
Guédiguian's poetic sensibility that such blemishes are easily
forgiven.
Le Voyage en
Arménie is an engaging piece that not only reaffirms our
appreciation of its author's talent, but also, and more importantly, extends our awareness of
the troubled paradise sitting on the edge of European civilisation.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Robert Guédiguian film:
Lady Jane (2008)
Film Synopsis
When her father, Barsam, mysteriously disappears, Anna is deeply
concerned. A doctor, she has just diagnosed that he has a serious
heart condition, and may die unless he is treated soon. Picking
up some clues that Barsam left behind, Anna flies off to Armenia, where
her father was born. There, whilst looking for her lost father,
she collects a diverse entourage, including a chauffeur who cannot
speak her language, a young French doctor, a former soldier and a young
girl who is desperate to start a new life in France...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.