Film Review
A humdrum life in one of the drearier precincts of Belgium, or a life
of unbridled freedom on the paradisiacal island of Corsica?
That's the stark choice that Christina, the 30-year-old heroine of
Pierre Duculot's debut feature
Au
cul du loup, is confronted with when fate, or rather her deceased
grandmother, lobs a forgotten Corsican retreat into her lap. For
anyone who has ever been to either Belgium or the Island of Beauty it seems like a
no-brainer but as Christina soon discovers paradise is not quite all
it's cracked up to be, and leaving Belgium means severing her ties with
not just her family but also her longstanding boyfriend.
Au cul du loup is an
unpretentious auteur piece whose charm lies principally in its
near-Bressonian simplicity. It doesn't dwell on the obvious, nor
does it make a meal of the heroine's inner conflict as she negotiates a
premature mid-life crisis. Christelle Cornil is compelling in her first role (the eager-eyed may have previously spotted her
in Mikael Buch's
Let My People Go! (2011))
- her subtle performance joins up the dots in Duculot's spare
screenplay, revealing a convincing portrait of a thirty-something
looking for meaning in her life.
The vivid contrast between the two locations - Charleroi predictably
drab and oppressive, Corsica lush and inviting - mirrors the divide
between Christina, who longs to make a fresh start, and her parents,
who are trapped until their dying days in a life of middleclass
mediocrity. The basic set-up is a familiar one and the film does
tend to rake in some well-worn clichés, but Duculot's
refreshingly understated approach, provides a fresh perspective on a
phenomenon known to everyone over the age of thirty - that need to find
yourself as you traverse the precarious bridge between
youth and middle-age. And if Duculot's objective had simply been
to make us fall in love with Corsica (it is surely sacrilege to refer to any part of it
as 'the wolf's bottom'), he certainly succeeded.
Au cul du loup is such a modest,
quiet film that it risks being quickly forgotten, but its subtle poetry
lingers, like the faint whispers of a dream.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Not yet thirty, Christina leads a humdrum existence in a humdrum town in
Belgium, where she lives with her humdrum boyfriend Marco. One day,
she is surprised to learn that her grandmother has died and bequeathed her
a small house on the island of Corsica. Christina's family are as puzzled
by this legacy as she is, and no one seems to know why the old woman bought
the house in the first place. Christina resists pressure to sell the
house and instead she sets off to Corsica by herself to take a look at it.
Although situated in an attractive, remote part of the island, the house
is in a bad state of repair, and yet Christina is strangely reluctant to
part with it. As she mulls over why her grandmother should choose to
leave her this strange gift she begins to see the world in a whole new light...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.