Film Review
1994 was the year in which the indifference of the West to the problems
of Africa was brought into sharp relief, thanks to a handful of
journalists who decided that a small matter of genocide was something
the world should know about. The massacre of around a million
Tutsis by extreme militant Hutus in Rwanda took place over a three
month period and represented a failure not only of the United Nations,
which was unwilling to send more than a token peacekeeping force to the
country (too small to achieve anything useful), but also of the world
community to put pressure on their governments to intervene and arrest
the carnage. The Dark Continent might as well be re-christened
the Invisible Continent.
One of the first journalists to sound the alarm that awoke the rest of
the world to the crisis in Rwanda was a 32-year-old French news
reporter Jean-Christophe Klotz, who was sent to the country in April
1994 to compile a report for French television on the evacuation of
French nationals after the assassination of President Juvénal
Habyarimana. Klotz subsequently made an award-winning
documentary,
Kigali, des images
contre un massacre (2006), which offered a sobering reflection
on the politics of the Rwanda genocide, and also the role of the media
in reporting it. Four years on, Klotz relates his own experiences
in
Lignes de front, his first
dramatic feature.
In contrast to Klotz's earlier documentary,
Lignes de front concerns itself
not with the objective reality of genocide but with the subjective
experience of someone who is brought face-to-face with it. There
is a striking similarity with Francis Ford Coppola's
Apocalypse Now (1979), in that,
confronted with an atrocity of soul-shattering proportions, the central
character is impelled to undertake a dark personal journey in an
attempt to make sense of the madness he has observed. As with
Klotz's earlier documentary, the film condemns the West's indifference
to the Rwanda mass killings and it raises some important questions over
the role that journalists have to play in influencing public opinion.
However, these are tangential to the film's real purpose, which is to
invite reflection on whether an individual acting on his own initiative
can ever change things for the better.
It is more than fifteen years since the genocide in Rwanda finally made
it onto our television screens (too late to make much of a difference),
but judging by the spate of films that have been made since the
massacre (for example, Terry George's
Hotel
Rwanda and Michael Caton-Jones'
Shooting Dogs) it remains very much
in the public consciousness. What distinguishes Jean-Christophe
Klotz's film is its focus on the individual. It is not concerned
with generalities, it doesn't set out to make a great political point
or to lecture us on man's inhumanity to man. Rather, it is a
low-key film that is simply about one man who wants to change the world
for the better but finds he cannot. The question that Klotz poses
in his intense and conscience-stirring film is:
what would you do in his situation - step in and risk your own neck, or
simply roll over and go back to sleep?
Jean-Christophe Klotz could have legitimately played the main character
in the film (the journalist Antoine) but wisely he instead cast Jalil
Lespert in his place. It is an admirable choice as Lespert has an
excellent track record when it comes to playing characters who are
outwardly tough and resilient, but inwardly sensitive and surprisingly
fragile. Antoine's gradual transformation, from someone who
merely observes, to someone who is impelled to get involved, is
portrayed by Lespert with a harrowing sense of reality, and it is hard
not to identify with his character as he becomes increasily caught up
in his own private battle against the indifference of others. The
film's sober ending may at first appear pessimistic but it offers the
tiniest sliver of hope. Even if one man cannot
change the world by himself, it may just be possible for him to
influence a dozen others who might begin to make a difference, whilst
the rest of the world sleeps on in blissful ignorance.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
Antoine Rives is a freelance journalist who is preparing a report on
repatriated Rwandans. In the course of his work, he gets to know
Clément, a Rwandan student of Hutu origin who is married to a
Tutsi woman named Alice. The latter has gone missing, so Antoine
persuades Clément to accompany him to Rwanda so that they can
look for her. What Antoine witnesses in this troubled African
country surpasses his worst expectations and he wonders to what extent
he should expose this human tragedy to the rest of the world.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.