Film Review
With her most recent film, a powerfully rendered evocation of the
collapse of colonialism in Africa, director Claire Denis shows a
remarkable return to form and leaves us in no doubt that she is still
very much a force to be reckoned with. In recent years, critical
opinion has generally turned against this most fiercely independent of
filmmakers who was once hailed as one of French cinema's great
auteurs. Certainly, since her masterful
Beau
travail (1999), Denis' work has lost some of its impact and
she has looked increasingly like a director who is more preoccupied
with experimenting with form and style for her own amusement than in
making films for a cinema audience. Not so with this latest
offering.
White Material is Claire Denis
at her best, a visually stunning and emotionally intense work that
virtually explodes off the screen, such is the power of the story it
tells and the brilliance of its mise-en-scène. The film is
relentlessly tense and forbidding, portraying a world that is on the
point of collapsing into anarchy, with characters living on a
knife-edge, oblivious to (or unwilling to accept) the danger that is
poised to carry them off. Yet, despite the bleakness of its
subject, the film also possesses a haunting lyrical quality, nourished
by the beauty of the African setting, that makes it apparent just why
the white protagonists are so reluctant to leave their country.
The contradictions which underpin the narrative (reflecting the
author's own ambivalence towards colonialism) echo those that we found
in Denis' first film,
Chocolat (1988), which is also
set in Africa and treads similar ground.
Denis' casting of Isabelle Huppert in the lead role was always going to
be controversial, since Huppert had played a very similar character in
another recent colonialism-themed film,
Un Barrage contre le Pacifique
(2009). As similar as these two films are, the character that
Huppert portrays in
White Material
is somewhat more complex and ambiguous, and a much more suitable role
for an actress of Huppert's calibre. What makes her particularly
well-suited for the role she plays in this film (a headstrong and
independent plantation owner) is her ability to subtly reveal her
inner feelings, creating an apparent disconnect between what she
appears to be on the surface and what she is really experiencing, deep down.
When the emotions do break free and come rushing to the surface,
we can have no doubt that these are real emotions, keenly felt, and
with a sharp visceral edge.
The supporting characters are also much more
interesting than those in Rithy Panh's film, and far
more convincingly portrayed by a talented pool of actors: Christophe
Lambert, Isaach de Bankolé, Michel Subor and Nicolas
Duvauchelle. The very qualities that are missing from
Un Barrage contre le Pacifique -
passion, vitality and a real sense off emotional conflict - are to be found in
abundance in
White Material,
thanks largely to the contributions from its superlative cast.
There is a searing tragic quality to this film which is hard to express
but which is inescapably felt by anyone who watches it. The film
appears to take an anti-colonialist stance and yet
we cannot help sympathising more with the white settlers than with the
black natives. Should we rejoice in the passing of colonialism or
not? With some irony, Claire Denis reminds us that we can never
take an objective view of history.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Claire Denis film:
Les Salauds (2013)