Film Review
Rebecca Zlotowski's third directorial outing, after her acclaimed debut piece
Belle épine (2010)
and its somewhat less well-received follow-up
Grand central (2013), is a
mystifying and gloriously overblown meditation on the somewhat tenuous connection
between cinema and the paranormal. Like Olivier Assayas's recent fantasy
digression
Personal Shopper,
Planetarium is a film that positively wallows in its unbridled artfulness
and lack of substance - indeed it goes out on an extraordinally long limb
to convince us that all a film needs to impress are some excessively stylish
directorial flourishes and a surfeit of seductive visuals. The comparison
between the two films is apt because they both exhibit the same worrying
tendency that has been creeping into art house cinema over the past few years
- a rejection of narrative form in favour of a more abstract and wishy-washy
kind of movie experience,
auteur-plus-plus.
Zlotowski doesn't entirely make the faux pas that Assayas committed in his
film, which was to regard the plot as an optional extra, but her bizarre
impressionistic fable feels just as insubstantial, despite its welter of
lush visuals and some mesmerising performances from its two über-photogenic
lead actresses - Natalie Portman and Lily-Rose Depp (daughter of Johnny).
There's an obvious point of contact between the mystical art of moviemaking,
which conjures up deceptively tangible realities from nothing more than the
interplay of light and shadow, and the black art of the career spiritualist,
whose ability to transcend this mortal sphere and reach out to the dead may
be real or delusional (it hardly matters which). Set against these
shimmering mirage realities there is a world that feels even more fantastic
- Europe in the 1930s, a dark place where tolerance and peaceful co-existence
are slowly giving way to the worst kind of fanaticism as the continent slides
towards the grimmest period in its history. Where is the dividing line
between fantasy and reality? Zlotowski's film almost convinces us that
no such boundary exists. Everything is illusion.
It's hard not to succumb to the visual allure of
Planetarium and its
strangely hypnotic weaving together of parallel realities, but by the mid-point
its lack of a concrete foundation soon becomes painfully evident. It's
all smoke and shadows, eerily evocative of the period it depicts and yet
failing to engage at anything more than a superficial level. The main
characters, despite being convincingly portrayed, are as vague and insubstantial
as the gossamer narrative that they coast along and this adds to the impression
that you aren't so much watching the film as dreaming it. Zlotowski's
indefinable third feature is certainly an interesting experiment in form
and it comes with its own unique poetry. But, like Assayas's misjudged
fantasy offering, it leaves you feeling that your time has been mostly wasted
and that all you have witnessed is a vague outline of the far superior film
that might have fallen from the ether had the director been willing to go
the extra mile.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the late 1930s, two young American sisters, Kate and Laura Barlow, have
found success on the cabaret circuit as mediums able to make contact with
the spirits of the dead. Whilst performing in Paris, they are spotted
by a film producer, André Korben, who, impressed by their paranormal
abilities, hires them for his next film. Thrilled to take part in this
wildly ambitious venture, the sisters agree not only to take up residence
in Korben's palatial home but also to participate in séances to indulge
his fascination for the occult. As the two women allow themselves to
be drawn into Korben's own fantasy world they fail to take stock of the real-life
dramas that are accumulating in the world outside. The Jewish film
producer also fails to see the dangers that are heading his way as a wave
of anti-Semitism surges across the continent of Europe...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.