Film Review
For her feature debut, director Rebecca Zlotowski delivers an arresting
but brutal portrait of adolescence, a work of considerable merit that was a
worthy recipient of the Louis Delluc First Film Prize in 2010. A
classic teen drama
à la
française,
Belle
épine has an austerity, intensity and sombre realism
that immediately calls to mind the films of
Maurice Pialat,
but it also has a distinctive poetic quality that gives
it the character of a dark fairy tale. Lately, this kind of
hard-edged realist drama has been on the decline, as an increasing
number of young filmmakers divert their talents towards more marketable
genres - comedies, thrillers and visceral horror films.
Belle épine is a film that
bucks this worrying trend and reassures us that the
film d'auteur is still very much
alive in France.
Zlotowski's suitably pared back direction allows lead actress
Léa Seydoux to take charge and give what is assuredly her finest
performance to date. Previously noticed in Christophe
Honoré's
La Belle personne (2008)
and Quentin Tarantino's
Inglourious
Basterds (2009), Seydoux is one of France's most promising young
acting talents and brings an intensity and blistering reality to each
of her screen portrayals.
Belle
épine offers her her most challenging role to date - a
teenager tormented by the twin traumas of a family bereavement and her
nascent sexuality - yet she acquits herself with a performance of
extraordinary power and poignancy. Whilst Prudence is hardly the
most sympathetic of characters - her thoughts and emotions are
hermetically sealed in a tough outer shell and she remains an
enigmatic, distant soul - yet Seydoux compels us to identify with her
and engage with her surging emotional crises. Although Léa
Seydoux dominates the film, it would be a sin to overlook the
contributions of the supporting cast, which includes such talented
young actors as Anaïs Demoustier, Michaël Abiteboul and
Nicolas Maury, all excellent and equally convincing
portrayals of adolescent angst.
Whilst
Belle épine
deals with familiar themes, it does so without recourse to the familiar
clichés and in a way that is refreshingly raw, avoiding sham
emotions and showing life as it is, from the perspective of a
confused and vulnerable teenager. Prudence's inability to
communicate with others, to articulate her grief and solicit help from
others, is deftly conveyed by long silences and sparse dialogue, whilst
the almost relentlessly pounding soundtrack (of rock music and bike
noise) perfectly evokes the shrieking rebellion that takes possession
of teenagers as they struggle to navigate the stormy passage from
childhood to adulthood. This is not a comfortable film to watch,
as both its director and lead actress resist the temptation to soften
the viewing experience by playing the obvious emotional chords.
Belle épine is a film that
cuts deep into our emotions and leaves a lingering sore.
Rebecca Zlotowski's next feature
Grand central (2013)
has a similar raw authenticity but makes somewhat less of an impact.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Prudence Friedman is 17 and is currently living alone in the family apartment
in Paris. Her mother has just died, her father is away on a business
trip to Canada, and her sister Frédérique has moved out.
Prudence suddenly finds she has more freedom than she has ever known before
but doesn't yet feel grown up. Then she gets to know Marilyne Santamaria,
a girl who goes to her school. Marilyne is the free-spirited rebel
that Prudence wants to be, doing what she wants, mixing with whoever she
chooses. It is Marilyne who introduces her to the thrills of
motorcycle racing on the biker circuit at Rungis. Prudence takes a
liking to one of the bikers, Franck, and they are soon an item. Prudence's
first taste of romantic love proves to a bitter experience and it quickly dawns
on her that Franck is merely playing with her. Growing up is harder
than the teenager had supposed...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.