Film Review
Saint Ange, the first
full-length film from Pascal Laugier, is one of French cinema's
surprisingly rare excursions into the fantasy-horror genre.
Initially at least, it promises to be a worthy example of the genre - a
seductive melange of the classic French film
Les Disparus de Saint-Agil
(1938) and Stephen King's novel
The
Shining. Unfortunately, after an intriguing beginning,
where the everyday normality of a young woman's experiences begin to
meld with a nightmarish fantasy, it quickly starts to run out of
steam. The narrative fails to develop, we lose sight of what is
real and what is imaginary, and the film becomes a messy exercise in artistic self-indulgence.
Whilst most of the cast appear hampered by a mediocre
screenplay, Virginie Ledoyen salvages something with her intense and
darkly introspective performance, which conveys a sense of mounting
horror, even if the source of this horror is, to the spectator,
annoyingly opaque and abstract. It's
a shame that the film's better points are undermined by its failings -
a lack of narrative cohesion, a tendency for artistic excess
for the sake of it, and one the most excruciating soundtracks
imaginable. If you watch this film, it's as well to
have a pair of earplugs handy...
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
At the end of the 1950s, the Saint Ange orphanage is about to close
down after the tragic death of one of its child residents. Anna,
a solitary young woman, arrives to help with the cleaning of the
building and is immediately assailed by strange imaginings, as if the
spirits of dead children were trying to speak to her. Anna
is surprised to find another woman of her age, Judith, in one of the
upstairs bedrooms. It is apparent that Judith is suffering from
severe mental derangement, but Anna develops an instant rapport with
her. Something is clearly wrong, but will Anna resolve the
mystery, or will she end up like Judith, or worse...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.