Film Review
In a film which looks suspiciously as if was conceived as a swansong for the legendary
Italian actor Marcello Mastroianni
, Chilean director Raoul Ruiz achieves a masterful melange of the surreal, the absurd,
the melancholy and the quite frankly disturbing. All of Ruiz' films have the
character of a puzzle about them, but
Trois vies et une seule mort remains his
most baffling and intellectually demanding work to date. This is one of those films
where the closer you look, the more inexplicable it appears. Yet, no matter how
deeply you probe, you still have the feeling that it all makes some kind of sense.
Even the bizarre flights of fancy into Buñelesque surrealism appear believable,
as Ruiz has somehow succeeded in warping our understanding of the world around us.
This is not an easy film to watch - it requires a great deal of concentration, a certain
amount of imagination and a willingness on the part of the spectator to participate in
it. For anyone who is prepared to invest the effort to make the experience work,
Trois vies et une seule mort is a hugely satisfying film, which offers a substantial
payback through its twisted comedy and the feeling that you have at least partly solved
a profoundly complex mystery.
Where Ruiz excels is in the area of cinematography - his films are so beautifully filmed
that they can on that basis alone be considered as works of art. In this film, this
particular talent allows him to conjure up a world which is neither fantasy nor real,
but existing in some sinister twilight world between the two, where the rules of normal
everyday experience are obeyed, but only up to a point. It is this which gives
the film the character of a dream, and which makes the film resist our attempts to find
some rational explanation in what we see. Consciously we know that it is all an
incoherent jumble, yet something compels us to keep looking for a pattern. We delude
ourselves into thinking we have the explanation, but when the film ends we realise how
flawed and subjective our interpretation is. In a similar vein to the writings of Frantz
Kafka and the films of Alain Resnais, the film mocks our confidence in the notion of an
objective reality. We can trust - or distrust - whatever we see in this film,
to the extent that no two spectators will end up drawing the same conclusions. This
level of conscious subjectivity is comparatively rare in cinema, something which make
this film special and particularly rewarding.
Marcello Mastroianni's presence
dominates the film, indeed haunts it like a world-weary ghost. It goes without saying
that in this, his last film appearance bar one, his performance (or rather performances,
since he plays four characters), is faultless. In the film's chilling third segment
(a mixture of children's fairytale and Edgar Allen Poe), we have the pleasure of seeing
the great actor appearing alongside his real-life daughter, Chiara Mastroianni.
There is a palpable sense of regret when Mastroianni walks off into the sunset at the
end of the film, and irony that a man who has brought to life so many characters should
himself die but once.
© James Travers 2003
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Next Raoul Ruiz film:
Généalogies d'un crime (1997)
Film Synopsis
A radio broadcaster narrates a series of remarkable tales from his studio, beginning with
the story of travelling salesman Mateo Strano. After a period of twenty years, Strano
returns to his first wife Maria to find that she is living with another man, André.
Having gained Andre's confidence by telling him that he has been bewitched by fairies
for the past two decades, Strano lures André to his apartment and kills him, before
reacquainting himself with Maria. In the next story, a professor at the Sorbonne,
Georges Vickers, turns his back on his invalid mother, his home and his job and finds
he can earn just as much money as a tramp. He is befriended by a prostitute, Tania,
who turns out to be the head of a large company. The third story begins with a couple
of newly weds, Martin and Cecile, discovering that they have a mysterious benefactor.
The impecunious couple learn that they have inherited a château along with a valet
whom they must keep at all costs. When they realise that they are being slowly poisoned,
the young couple make a quick exit. Finally, wealthy industrialist Luc Allamand
starts to have a mental collapse when the family he invented to impress his clients suddenly
enter his life. In an explosive finale, the four main protagonists in these four
stories turn out to be fragments of the same man...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.