Film Review
Noir Océan, the tenth
full-length film from Belgian filmmaker Marion Hänsel, weaves
together a dark commentary on France's nuclear weapons testing
programme of the 1970s with a haunting meditation on the traumas of
adolescence - a curious mélange of themes which only just fails
to gel into a coherent whole. The film is inspired by two short
stories from a book entitled
Océan
Pacifique by the French author Hubert Mingarelli, a writer for
whom Hänsel has a close affinity. One of Belgium's most prominent
independent filmmakers and producers, Hänsel was voted her
country's Woman of the Year in 1987 for her daring film
Les Noces barbares, a provocative
study in the breakdown in the relationship between a mother and her
son.
Hänsel's most recent film adopts a similarly realist style but has
a far more visible political edge to it.
Noir Océan contains a veiled
condemnation of the way that governments cynically exploit the armed
services, subjecting them to hazards of which they are not fully aware,
and then failing to offer adequate compensation once the hazards have
taken their toll. Between 1960 and 1996, France carried out over
200 nuclear tests involving around 150 thousand personnel. It was
not until 2010 that a law was passed in France to compensate victims of
these tests (22 years after a similar law came into effect in the
United States).
Whilst it quite clearly has a political axe or two to grind,
Noir Océan is primarily a
coming-of-age story, revolving around three fragile, uncommunicative
young men (probably in their late teens, early twenties) whose process
of self-discovery is frustrated by the harsh military regime to which
they subject themselves. It is unclear just why these men are
where they are (it is a fair bet they are reluctant conscripts), and
indeed the film tells us next to nothing about their background.
By revealing so little about the characters, Hänsel makes great
demands of her audience and the film's central weakness is that we
never really get to understand just who the main protagonists are -
they are just generic lost adolescents, too abstract and ill-defined to
be all that interesting or convincing, despite some very creditable
performances from a talented trio of actors (Adrien Jolivet, Nicolas
Robin and Romain David).
The film's lack of character depth and languorous pacing are at least
partially redeemed by the lyrical beauty of its composition.
Watching it is like staring into the eerily calm waters of the sea
after a storm - you can't quite make it out but there is something dark
and sinister just beneath the surface. The monster that we
anticipate is revealed to us, only fleetingly, in the film's disturbing
but imperfectly realised conclusion. After the sailors have done
their duty and violated the natural world with another hideously
pointless atom bomb test, we see them visibly transformed. They
have lost their innocence and seem suddenly to have acquired an
ungainly self-awareness. One of the men has metamorphosed into a
mindless brute, thoughtlessly lobbing live crabs onto a fire.
It's a replay of the familiar fall of man scenario, with a predictably
blunt eco-slant.
Noir Océan had the
potential to be a powerful and insightful film drama, but Hänsel's
inability or unwillingness to fully engage with her subject and her
characters prevents it from being anything more than a vague curiosity
piece. The political-environmental messages are timely and well
constructed but could perhaps have been delivered with more subtlety,
although the film's principal failing is that it fails to take us
inside the characters and thereby give us a more vivid impression of
how they are altered by their experiences in an atom bomb
test. For all its unsettling lyrical beauty,
Noir Océan is frustratingly
insubstantial and you end up wondering just what exactly its director
is trying to say.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
In 1972, three young sailors aboard a French naval vessel are to take
part in atomic bomb tests on the Pacific island of Mururoa. Their
names are Moriaty, Massina and Da Maggio, and they barely out of their
teens. None of them is remotely aware of the danger he and his
comrades are exposing themselves to, nor of the devastating impact
their work could have on the world's environment. It will be many
years before they realise the extent of their naivety...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.