Film Review
For his second full-length film, French director Frédéric
Balekdjian follows his bleak crime drama
Les Mauvais joueurs (2005) with
this equally sombre portrayal of an intense father-son
relationship. With most of the drama presented from the
perspective of the central child protagonist,
Un monde à nous feels like a
film noir flavoured fairy tale, in which the boundary between reality
and fantasy is merged to such an extent that we can never be certain
whether the father's paranoid anxieties have any basis in reality.
This is a genuinely disturbing film, and one which will change forever
your reaction to The Supremes' hit single "Baby Love"...
Balekdjian, bravely, cast his own son, Anton, in the role of the child
lead, playing opposite Edouard Baer, who has become a leading light of
French cinema in recent years. Both actors are a revelation in
this film. Anton Balekdjian had appeared in just one film prior
to this - Djamel Bensalah's spoof western
Big
City (2007) - but already looks as though he might be a
future star. There is a brooding intensity and brutality to
his and Baer's performances which make their characters totally
convincing participants in a bizarre game of survival, in an austere world that threatens
to destroy their relationship.
Un monde à nous is
striking in its originality, compelling with its subtle dark poetry,
but it is by no means faultless. Some of the direction appears
heavy handed and prone to cliché in a few scenes, whilst the
camerawork occasionally looks as if the technicians were
trying a little too hard to achieve a raw
cinéma vérité
look. However, thanks largely to the arresting contributions of
its principal actors,
Un monde
à nous is film that has much to commend it. The
first person perspective allows it to exert a strange hold on the
spectator, drawing us into a dark world in which a father and his son
are bound to one another by an disquieting mix of fear and love.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Marc and his young son Noé arrive in a new town, hoping to begin
a new life. Noé starts a new school, where he makes new
friends, but his father continues to put him through intensive training
in combat sports. Since the death of Noé's mother, father
and son have been on the run - but from what...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.