Film Review
As the debate over gay marriage continues to rage throughout the
western world, an over-inflated typhoon fuelled as much by blind prejudice as
ignorance,
Sébastien Lifshitz's latest film could hardly have been better
timed and provides further weight for the right of same sex couples to
marry if they choose. It is an issue that has been particularly
controversial in France and has seen a resurgence of the homophobic
hysteria that came about at the height of the AIDS pandemic in the
1980s. 'Mariage pour tous' is something that not everyone is keen
to endorse in supposedly modern liberal France, and Lifshitz's film
provided a timely contribution to the poisoned polemic, showing the
human consequences of the kind of anti-gay discrimination that has
recently come under the spotlight.
Sébastien Lifshitz first came to prominence with his daring
debut feature
Presque rien (2000), a partly
autobiographical film recounting the first amorous experiences of a
vulnerable young gay man. Since, he has garnered further acclaim
with his documentary
La
Traversée (2001), in which a friend of his attempts to
track down his missing father, and
Wild
Side (2004), a mixed-race ménage-à-trois drama
involving a transsexual. Far less provocative than Lifshitz's
previous films,
Les Invisibles
is a sensitive and humane work that confronts us with the banality of
homosexuality, the love that dares not speak its name. Through the
testimony of gay men and women born in the 1920s and 30s, the film
provides a moving account of how a stratum of our society has been
sidelined, misunderstood and abused by the majority, and how, as a
consequence, they have struggled to find fulfilment and happiness in
their lives.
Over an eighteen month period, Lifshitz interviewed around seventy
people, but whittled this down to half a dozen very different
personalities that span the entire social spectrum. By allowing
his participants to speak freely in front of the camera, unprompted and
strangely at ease as they do so, Lifshitz delivers a fascinating
portrait of a generation that was denied many of the freedoms we now
take for granted and for whom the only option was to pretend to be
something they were not within a society that could not accept their
true identity, or else to run away and seek happiness elsewhere, in
rural backwaters or foreign climes. One working class man recalls
how he was expelled from the French Communist Party for being gay; a
woman from a more privileged milieu tells us how social pressures
forced her to marry and have children, even though she knew all along
that she was a lesbian. Some of the anecdotes are humorous,
others are heartrendingly poignant.
The film's title has a double significance. In their youth, the
participants in the film were unseen because society refused to accept
them on account of their sexual orientation. Now, in their
declining years, they are invisible because of a more insidious
social phenomenon - age discrimination. How often is anyone
over the age of seventy given the chance to speak into a microphone and
talk about his or her life experiences? The most radical aspect
of
Les Invisibles is not
that its contributors are openly gay, but rather that they have lived
at least six decades on Earth. From their colourful accounts of
the sexual revolution, in which some of them took an active part,
and tragicomic accounts of their first romantic stirrings in the 1940s and 50s,
the participants can hardly fail to engage our sympathies with their candour
and eloquence. And how much more illuminating are their reflections
on life and love than the incoherent ramblings of the latest teen idol.
Beautifully filmed in Cinemascope,
Les
Invisibles is as much a treat for the eyes as it is for the
heart and the intellect, the stunning rural and coastal landscapes
investing the film with a lyrical charm that perfectly complements the
montage of personal stories. Whilst it is evident that all of its
participants have been adversely affected by society's attitudes
towards them, it is equally apparent that they have all enjoyed rich
and contented lives. They have found a way around the prejudice
of others and been able to live the romantic idyll, albeit often much
later in their lives than they would have liked. In his most
accomplished film to date, Sébastien Lifshitz not only delivers
the most intelligent insight into the experiences of a marginalised
minority but also makes us aware of the prejudices that still taint our
society - prejudices that are now painfully evident as the latest
attempt for equality before the law is fiercely resisted by those who
continue to regard same sex relationships as a dangerous
aberration.
Les Invisibles
reassures us that we have come a long way over the past half a century,
but it is also clear that we still have some way to go before we can
claim to be a truly tolerant society. 'Vive la différence'
feels like an empty slogan in France at the moment.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Sébastien Lifshitz film:
Les Corps ouverts (1998)