Film Review
Writer-director Frédéric Videau has been off the radar
for almost a decade, having made a promising filmmaking debut with his
first two features
Le Fils de
Jean-Claude Videau (2001) and
Variété
française (2003). Now he is back, with one of the
most unusual and provocative French films of the year.
À moi seule (a.k.a.
Coming Home) is loosely based on
the real-life story of Natascha Kampusch, an Austrian who was kidnapped
and imprisoned in a garage cellar from the age of ten for eight years
(between 1998 and 2006). Not only has Kampusch capitalised on her
experiences to make herself a celebrity in her own country, but her
story has inspired several books and films since, most notably Markus
Schleinzer's
Michael
(2011). The thing that most motivated Videau to make his film was
the complete lack of malice that Kampusch bore her kidnapper; in spite
of all the atrocious things he did to her, she was able to forgive him
and sympathise with him. How could such a thing be
possible? This is what Videau sets out to explore in his film.
Videau is not interested in presenting a realistic drama but rather
something more in the manner of a modern fable, intended to challenge
and provoke through its unromanticised portrayal of an ambiguous
relationship between a kidnapper and his victim. The suspense
time-bomb is diffused in the film's opening sequence, which shows
Gaëlle being set free by her abductor. Thereafter, the film
switches back and forth between the girl's past and future experiences,
inter-cutting scenes of her imprisonment with those depicting her
fraught attempts to readjust to a normal family life. The film's
fragmented narrative structure is presumably intended to reflect the
confused state of mind of the heroine as she struggles to grow
accustomed to her freedom, but it is weakened by an obvious dramatic
asymmetry. Videau is clearly far more interested in the period of
Gaëlle's imprisonment and invests far less effort in dealing with
the events that follow her release. This is the film's one and
only flaw.
The main point of interest is the inordinately complex relationship
that develops between the kidnapper (Vincent) and his victim
(Gaëlle). Videau is evidently a believer in the Stockholm
Syndrome, a well-documented phenomenon in which the victim of a
kidnapping develops an empathic bond with his or her abductor (possibly
as an instinctive survival strategy). Perhaps the most unsettling
thing about the film is that there is never any sense of a mutual
antagonism between the main protagonists - their relationship is nearer
to that of a father and daughter, rather than that of a tormentor and
his victim. There is plenty of brutality in the relationship, but
there is also tenderness and a shared understanding, and we soon
realise that the real victim is not Gaëlle but the kidnapper
himself. Vincent can never escape from his personal nightmare,
even when he has released his prisoner (we should note that his
real-life counterpart, Wolfgang Priklopil, committed suicide almost
immediately after his victim's escape).
What makes
À moi seule
such a particularly compelling film is the authenticity which the two
lead actors bring to it, assisted by Videau's remarkably restrained yet
highly astute screenwriting. Gaëlle is portrayed with an
almost ethereal sense of detachment by Agathe Bonitzer (the daughter of
screenwriter Pascal Bonitzer and filmmaker Sophie
Fillières). We never really get to understand Gaëlle;
her hold over her emotions is as strong and unflinching as her
kidnapper's hold over her. Yet, somehow, we instinctively know what it
is like to be in her predicament. When Gaëlle is forced to
look back on her period of captivity after her release, we share her sense
of estrangement from the world she must now live in. It is almost
as if she has been ripped from her true family and casually thrown into
a foster home. No one can imagine what she has been through, no
one can dare to comprehend the everlasting bond she has formed with her
captor. She might as well be on a different planet.
Reda Kateb is equally convincing as the strangely likeable kidnapper
Vincent. Like Gaëlle, Vincent has difficulty in showing his
true feelings and developing a rapport with others. The ease with
which Vincent can switch from thoughtless violence to paternal
gentleness suggests he is suffering from a severe personality
disorder. Perhaps we should pity him more than Gaëlle?
He has a far greater monster to deal with, the hydra that lives in his
head. Not long after his screen debut in the popular French
television series
Spiral and
Jacques Audiard's
Un prophète (2009),
Kateb has already proved himself to be a very capable young actor, and
judging by his nuanced performance in Videau's film we can expect to
see much more of him in the years to come.
It is thanks largely to Bonitzer and Kateb's subtle portrayals
of the prisoner and her jailer that the inversion of the two main roles is so effectively
handled. Rather than simply have us regard the unfortunate
prisoner as a victim, someone whose childhood has been stolen from her
by a wicked and thoughtless man, it instead portrays her as an
indomitable résistant, someone who is strengthened by
her experiences, not destroyed by them. In the end, it is not
Gaëlle we pity - she clearly has the guts and resourcefulness to
end up as President of France; rather, our sympathies are with Vincent,
the solitary, possibly deranged wretch who is condemned to dwell in a
far darker and emptier world than the one his captive ever knew.
It would be so easy to write Vincent off as a sick, evil monster, but
Videau compels us to reserve judgment and see that the greater evils
lie elsewhere, in a society that derives cheap sensationalist thrills
from the traumatic experiences of people like Gaëlle.
À moi seule transcends the
abject bleakness of its subject matter and emerges as a profound study
in human nature at its most uncomfortable and bewildering.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
For eight years, Gaëlle has been held captive by Vincent. During
this time, she has seen no one else - he was her entire world. Now
she is free, but in a world that feels alien to her. She has no connection
with anyone, not even her family. They are all strangers to her.
It is as if Gaëlle has been re-born into a world where no one understands
her, where no one can make contact with her. And yet, in spite of everything
she has been through, she cannot bring herself to hate the man who has taken
so much away from her. Her relationship with Vincent is the only part
of her life that feels real...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.