Film Review
Secret défense is a clever psychological thriller that plays unceasingly
on the subjectivity of good and evil - the notion that the same act can be seen from two
diametrically opposing perpectives, with our own prejudice tilting the scales so that
we are led to the wrong conclusion.
A suspicion of guilt becomes magnified very quickly into an unshakable certainty in Sylvie's
mind when she witnesses Welser's reaction when she accidentally kills his lover.
Thereafter, an act of apparent kindness is interpreted as deriving from very sinister
motives and Welser is immediately transformed into a dangerous, callous villain.
This is a film that succeeds because it manages so well to get into the minds of
its protagonists, particularly the troubled Sylvie, played brilliantly and with great
sensitivity by Sandrine Bonnaire.
The most striking aspect of the film is the constant sense of motion - by train, bike,
bus, on foot. This conveys an impression of paths converging and diverging, mirroring
the twists and turns in the plot and reinforcing Sylvie's disturbed state of mind.
The camera work and lighting, and particularly the use of so many night scenes, create
a palpable sense of menace, making incidental music superfluous.
It is pretty rare that one comes across a genuinely impressive film in the série
noire genre, but in this film veteran film-maker Jacques Rivette comes very close to achieving
just that.
© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Rivette film:
Va savoir (2001)
Film Synopsis
Sylvie, a young biologist, receives an impromptu visit from her brother who claims to
have proof that their father was murdered by Walser, his right-hand man. Shaken,
Sylvie pays a visit to Walser, now head of the company formerly belonging to her father,
but he refuses to discuss the matter. Aware that her brother his planning to have
his revenge, Sylvie acquires a gun and goes to Walser's country house one evening.
In a heated confrontation, the gun goes off accidentally, killing a young woman who was
Walser's secretary and lover. Walser's reaction to the death appears inexplicable,
until Sylvia finally discovers Walser's motivation for killing her father...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.