Film Review
On the face of it, Raphaël Jacoulot's second film appears to be a
substantial shift from his first,
Barrage
(2006), and yet as soon as you begin to compare the two films it
becomes evident that they have much in common. Whereas
Barrage is an austere social drama,
in the tradition of Jacques Doillon and Maurice Piallat,
Avant l'aube has all the hallmarks
of a coventional French psychological thriller, very much in the Claude
Chabrol mould. And yet whilst the two films
look very different, they do in
fact embrace similar themes - identity, family relationships,
the breakdown of the family unit and class prejudice. The crime
which initiates the drama and sets the protagonists off on their
fateful course is a pure MacGuffin, and like all good MacGuffins it
soon becomes irrelevant to what ensues. The focus of the
film is the complex relationship between the two main characters - a
grouchy, manipulative hotel proprietor and his eager-to-please trainee employee,
played respectively by Jean-Pierre Bacri and Vincent Rottiers.
The strength of this film lies not in what it says, but in what it
doesn't say - the bothersome gaps
which we have to fill in ourselves. And there is quite a lot of
gap filling to do, as we try to make sense of the two main characters
and understand how two people from such completely different worlds can
be drawn to one another. Is it merely self-preservation which drives
Jacques and Frédéric to form a Faustian pact, or is there
a deeper, more primitive stimulus for their mutual dependency?
The film not only looks and feels as if it might have been directed by Claude
Chabrol, it also addresses many of the concerns that preoccupied
Chabrol for much of his career, particularly the unbridgeable gulf
between the complacent bourgeoisie and the rest of society. There
are some striking similarities with Chabrol's
La
Cérémonie (1995) - both films depict an
ordered bourgeois setting thrown into chaos by an incursion from a
plebeian outsider with a suspicious background. And yet, whilst
it may cover very similar ground, Jacoulot's film is more subtle in
its approach. The bourgeois family unit is already primed to
self-destruct before the outsider puts in his appearance; like a cracked
ornament, it is just waiting for that gentle final tap that will reduce
it to smithereens. This much is evident almost from the
outset. What is more interesting is the way the two main
characters reveal themselves through their interactions - the
disenfranchised father who needs a son he can be proud of, and the
alienated young man who needs a father to serve as a role model and
moral guide. The apparent lack of sophistication in the film's thriller
trappings are belied by the subtlety of the
characterisation, and Raphaël Jacoulot shows that not only is he a
very competent director, he is also a very keen observer of
human nature.
What makes this a particularly impressive film is the stark realism
that is brought to it by its lead actors, Jean-Pierre Bacri and Vincent
Rottiers. Bacri needs no introduction - his
collaborations with Nicole Garcia, Alain Resnais and Agnès Jaoui have made him
one of the most recognisable faces in French cinema today - but rarely
has he given a performance of such intensity and complexity as he
does here. Bacri is well-matched by his co-star, Vincent
Rottiers, who, at 25, has already established himself as one of the
most exciting actors working in France today. It has been almost
a decade since Rottiers made his screen debut in Christophe Ruggia's
Les
Diables (2002), but it is only within the last year or two
that his career has taken off, after his electrifying turns in Claude
and Nathan Miller's
Je suis heureux que ma mère soit
vivante (2009) and Xavier Giannoli's
À
l'origine (2009). There is a troubled, dangerous edge
to Rottiers's engaging screen persona which makes him particularly well
suited for the kind of role he plays here, the disturbed, and possibly
malignant, social outcast. Jean-Pierre Bacri and Vincent
Rottiers are both extremely talented actors, but when they are brought
together there is a synergy that can only be described as visceral in
its impact. Yes, there are some creditable supporting
contributions from Sylvie Testud (who looks slightly surreal
as a woman police officer) and Ludmila Mikaël, but these are
pretty well eclipsed by what Bacri and Rottiers have to offer.
Through their tour de force contributions, what begins as a fairly
run-of-the-mill thriller soon develops into something far more
substantial - an existential drama and study in class alienation of the
bleakest and most riveting kind.
Avant l'aube is film that grabs
the attention from the off and does not let go until the very last frame, and even
then it still holds you in its power, a compelling and deeply troubling
excursion into film noir murk and intrigue.
© James Travers 2011
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