Film Review
The talented duo that brought us the mesmerising biopic
Séraphine
(2008) - director Martin Provost and actress Yolande Moreau - once more
pool their resources to deliver a film on inner conflict and extreme
family disharmony that is almost as gripping and starkly humane.
Adapted from the novel
The Long
Falling by the Irish writer Keith Ridgway,
Où va la nuit is an
exquisitely moulded synthesis of social drama and traditional French
policier which, whilst not as inspired nor as devastatingly poignant as
Provost's previous film, is rendered enthralling by Moreau's enigmatic
portrayal of a middle-aged woman struggling, and failing, to find a way
out of her personal hell.
Où va la nuit is
particularly effective in its first half, which presents a harrowing
picture of domestic violence that can only lead to the crisis point, a
premeditated murder, on which the rest of the drama hinges.
Agnès Godard's moody photography and the sheer intensity of
Moreau's performance convey, with chilling realism, a bleak,
unremitting sense of oppression and despair. Such is the degree
of suffering evoked by Moreau that we are compelled to align our
sympathies with the woman who is impelled to murder the man who has
made her life a misery. The themes are those you will find in any
Greek tragedy, the atmosphere - a brooding, quietly escalating sense of
desperation - is that of a Georges Simenon novel, but the barrage of
conflicting emotions that assail us is something unfamiliar and deeply
uncomforting, the product of Yolande Moreau's arresting portrayal of a
woman teetering on the edge of the abyss, the tragically fated prisoner of her
circumstances and flawed personality traits.
When the location shifts to Brussels and the heroine Rose attempts to
patch things up with her estranged son, this is where the film begins
to slacken its grip on the audience's emotions and interest and starts
to resemble a more conventional police drama. Despite an
excellent performance from Pierre Moure, who brings a tortured
introspection to his interpretation of the gay son who is traumatised
by guilt and an inability to accept the past, the dramatic
possibilities of Rose's attempts to rebuild her relationship with her
son are not exploited sufficiently and so the film loses much of its
focus and authenticity as it becomes enmeshed in the tedious mechanics
of its plot. Provost's mise-en-scène also suffers as a
result of the shortcomings in the script, visibly lacking the inspired
touch with which the film began, luring us into Rose's solitary
nightmare existence. The film is, however, magnificently redeemed
by a faultless, richly nuanced performance from Yolande Moreau, who
once again leaves us in no doubt that she is one of the finest
actresses working in France today.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Fed up with being a victim, Rose Mayer decides to take charge of her own
destiny and murder the aggressive husband who has made her life hell. She then takes flight
to Brussels, where she meets up with her son who left home many years
ago. Rose may be free but her newfound freedom cannot erase her
burgeoning sense of guilt. She must learn to accept the traumas of the past
if she is to move on and start a new life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.