Film Review
With
Léon, French film director Luc Besson followed the successful formula
he skilfully engineered in his earlier film Nikita, creating another fast-moving action
movie based around the traumatised lives of its marginalised protagonists. The film
is as shocking as it is visually stunning, bolstered by some captivating acting performances
and a strong plot, a stirring tale of survival, companionship and revenge.
A provocative film,
Léon aroused negative censorship on both sides of the
Atlantic, although for differing reasons. In the United States, the relationship
between Léon and Mathilda was judged to have the unacceptable ring of paedophilia
about it, whilst the Europeans were more concerned with the idea that a 12 year old girl
should be taught to use a rifle. Certainly, it would be easy to condemn the film
for its apparent complacency with the American gun culture, and the film does have more
than its fare share of violent deaths.
The reason why
Léon is a great film is
not that it is a deliberately
shocking, hard-edged action film. Although the action scenes do take up a substantial
part of the film, and these scenes are impressively executed, the film works because,
amidst all this spectacle and drama, Besson manages to find time to develop some convincing
characterisation. The film veers dangerously closely to sentimentality on a few
occasions, but the unlikely pairing of a vulnerable young orphan and a solitary professional
killer offers an original and thought-provoking view on life. The film is at its
most impressive when is at its least spectacular.
Jean Reno, often cast as the silent hard man in French films, is a perfect choice for
the silent killer
Léon, appearing quite different to the conventional American
tough guy. His apparent nativity and courtesy provides a curious contrast with his
foul-mouthed, worldly-wise young sidekick, played by the teenager Natalie Portman in her
remarkable film debut.
The film pulls off a spectacular role reversal with Léon and Mathilda ending up
the heroes, battling for their lives against the true villains, an American drug enforcement
agency official played by Gary Oldman, and his gang of murderous henchmen. Oldman's
entertaining, over the top performance makes his character a truly formidable adversary,
although you do wonder how such a crazed psychopath could ever have got such a senior
post in the DEA.
This is not a film that will appeal to all tastes. Besson's obsession with visceral
realism can be off-putting, particularly when it goes too far beyond the spectator's experience
and expectations. (This is most apparent in his 1999 film,
Joan of Arc where
some of the killings look faintly ridiculous.)
However,
Léon should not be placed in the same category as so many contemporary
films which exist merely to shock their audience and glorify violence. This is a
film with takes a strong moral standpoint against violence, making clear its corrupting
influence on the vulnerable and its inability to resolve life's problems. A valid
statement which is well made, but one that is sadly diluted by the intensity of the visual
drama which Besson feels obliged to use.
© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Luc Besson film:
The Fifth Element (1997)
Film Synopsis
Léon is a professional hitman whose life is changed forever when he meets Mathilda,
a twelve year old girl who lives a few doors next to him. Mathilda is beaten by
her father, a drugs dealer who works for a crooked government official, Norman Stansfield.
When Stansfield discovers he is being cheated, he sends his men to kill Mathilda's entire
family. The little girl escapes the carnage by calling on Léon. With
no family, she coerces the hitman to adopt her and train her to be a professional killer,
so that she can avenge the death of her younger brother...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.