Les Invasions barbares (2003)
Directed by Denys Arcand

Comdy / Drama
aka: The Barbarian Invasions

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Les Invasions barbares (2003)
Les Invasion barbares is the long overdue sequel to Denys Arcand's critically acclaimed 1986 film Le Déclin de l'empire américain, which was nominated for an Oscar in 1987. Seventeen years on, the characters of this earlier Canadian film are brought together in a poignant drama that tackles the process of dying, a subject that traditionally cinema has largely failed to do justice.  (Michael Haneke's Amour (2012) is one of the few films to tackle the issue seriously in the decade that followed). Whilst not as satisfying as Arcand's earlier film, Les Invasion barbares still manages to be an engaging, emotionally intense work - perhaps a tad too intellectual for its own good in a few places, but still having great impact, thanks to a well-honed script and some fine acting.

As the dying father and one-time libertine, Rémy Girard is touchingly comical and portrays his character's situation with great conviction and emotional sensitivity.  Marie-Josée Croze is also noted for her sympathetic portrayal of a young drug addict. Although controversial, the film makes a valuable contribution to the debate over whether the palliative use of hard drugs to ease suffering in the final stages of a terminal disease.  Les Invasion barbares was an international success, winning not just the Oscar for the Best Foreign Language Film in 2004, but also the equally coveted Best Film César in the same year, the first Canadian film to do so.
© James Travers 2006
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Film Synopsis

When he learns that his father, Rémy, is in the final stages of terminal cancer, businessman Sébastien reluctantly hastens to his bedside in a Montreal hospital.  After years of estrangement, the reunion is far from friendly, but Sébastien's mother persuades him to stay and help make his father's last few days as comfortable as possible.  Sébastien's ready money allows Rémy to move into a specially prepared room in the hospital and to receive a supply of heroine to ease the suffering.  For the latter, Sébastien is helped by a junkie, Nathalie, whose life is also marked by a pain for which hard drugs is the only solution.  As Sébastien rounds up Rémy's old friends to visit him, the dying man appears finally to accept his approaching death with equanimity.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Denys Arcand
  • Script: Denys Arcand
  • Cinematographer: Guy Dufaux
  • Music: Pierre Aviat
  • Cast: Rémy Girard (Rémy), Stéphane Rousseau (Sébastien), Marie-Josée Croze (Nathalie), Marina Hands (Gaëlle), Dorothée Berryman (Louise), Johanne-Marie Tremblay (Sister Constance Lazure), Pierre Curzi (Pierre Citrouillard), Yves Jacques (Claude), Louise Portal (Diane Leonard), Dominique Michel (Dominique St. Arnaud), Isabelle Blais (Sylvaine), Toni Cecchinato (Alessandro), Sophie Lorain (First Lover), Mitsou (Ghislaine), Markita Boies (Nurse Suzanne), Micheline Lanctôt (Nurse Carole), Denis Bouchard (Duhamel), Sylvie Drapeau (Second Lover), Jean-Marc Parent (Ronald the Syndicalist), Dominic Darceuil (Maxime)
  • Country: Canada / France
  • Language: French / English
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 112 min
  • Aka: The Barbarian Invasions ; Invasion of the Barbarians

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