Film Review
After making an impressive directorial debut with
Demi-tarif (2003), a humorous
portrait of a group of children trying to survive in Paris without
adult support, actress-turned-director Isild Le Besco won further
acclaim with this brutally realist coming of age drama. Shot in
just fifteen days on a shoestring budget,
Charly has a raw
cinéma
vérité aesthetic that achieves a striking authenticity and
depth which totally belie the film's apparent narrative
simplicity. Crudely photographed with a digital handheld camera
(by the director's brother Jowan Le Besco) and employing natural
locations which offer a limited palette of mainly dull earth colours,
the film has the austere look of Maurice Pialat's films, but there is
also a tenderness which compels us to sympathise with the main
characters, and also a smattering of downbeat humour which prevents
their situation from appearing hopelessly grim.
Le Besco cast her younger brother Kolia Litscher in the lead male role
(having previously employed him on
Demi-tarif)
- appropriately as it was Litscher's own traumatic adolescence that
inspired Le Besco to make the film. For the female lead, the
director called upon the services of a more experienced actor,
Julie-Marie Parmentier, who invariably gives her best in modest auteur
pieces of this kind, as is demonstrated by her heart-wrenching
performance in Martin Provost's
Le Ventre de Juliette
(2003). Litscher and Parmentier complement one another
perfectly - both possess a savage feral quality and a haunted
vulnerability, attributes which render their misfit characters
interesting and sympathetic. They resemble not so much outcasts as
castaways, urchins washed up on some remote shore. They develop a
mutual need for one another, but first they must learn to understand
each other's language, not an easy task when the only words that
Nicolas seems to know are "I dunno" whilst Charly, with her near
pathological obsession with order and cleanliness, gives a good
impression of an officer in the SS. Despite the obvious
undercurrents of sexual tension, Nicolas and Charly look like a
children playacting at being adults. Theirs is a quaint parody of an
adult relationship, but it is by playing the part of the adult that
Nicolas learns what adult responsibility is. When he finally
leaves the sanctuary of Charly's caravan he emerges as someone marching
confidently towards adulthood.
Over the past decade, Isild Le Besco has established herself as one of
France's most highly regarded actresses, winning widespread acclaim
through her collaborations with director Benoît Jacquot and
several up-and-coming filmmakers. If
Demi-tarif and
Charly are anything to go by, she
looks set to have an equally distinguished career as an auteur
filmmaker. The authenticity that she brings to her performances
is just as noticeable in her screenwriting and directing, but there is
something else - a freshness, a willingness to challenge convention and
push the boundaries in some unexpected places - in short, a touch of the
maverick combined with a rigorous auteur sensibility
that hasn't been felt so keenly since the glorious years of
the New Wave. Could Le Besco's directorial coming of age
herald the beginning of an exciting new era in French cinema?
© James Travers 2010
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Next Isild Le Besco film:
Bas-fonds (2010)
Film Synopsis
Nicolas, a 14-year-old boy living with foster parents, is inexplicably
disturbed when he sees a postcard of Belle-Île-en-Mer. On
the spur of the moment, he runs away, determined to find the place for
which he has acquired a sudden fascination. After several days of
hitchhiking, he arrives on the outskirts of Nantes where he meets a
young woman named Charly. The latter lives alone in a caravan
on a patch of wasteland and resorts to prostitution to make a living.
Charly allows Nicolas to stay with her, providing he sticks
religiously to the rules she lays down...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.