Film Review
A loose remake of Marcel Carné's classic
Le Jour se lève (1939),
De bon matin offers not only an
intricately crafted character study, of a man who is driven to kill by
events beyond his control, but also a sobering portrait of a society
that has completely lost sight of what is important in life amid the mindless
pursuit of wealth. As in his debut feature
Violence des échanges en milieu
tempéré (2003), director Jean-Marc Moutout
delivers an austere modern fable set within the cruel confines of the
profit-focused corporate world that is as timely as it is
compelling.
De bon matin
can so easily be read as a metaphor for all that is fundamentally wrong
with raw capitalism, a sour indictment of the profit-before-all
mentality that drove the entire world economy into the abyss in 2008
and which still prevails, a demonic spirit that no power on Earth can
exorcise, whatever havoc it wreaks.
Whilst the storyline has an obvious overlap with that of Joel
Schumacher's
Falling Down
(1993), Moutout is much more concerned with showing the inner turmoil
that leads his anti-hero to commit an atrocious and seemingly
inexplicable act of violence. Once the shock of the double
killing has been delivered, within the first five minutes of the film,
what follows is a series of nested flashbacks which gradually reveal to
us the motives and the circumstances that led inexorably to the tragic
denouement. We are compelled to identify with the central
protagonist, Paul, as the fragments of his shattered life are drawn
together in those final moments of reflection before he pulls the gun
on himself.
In a remarkable performance, perhaps the finest of his career,
Jean-Pierre Darroussin gives Paul such presence and authenticity that
watching his descent into hell feels like watching the grimmest
fly-on-the-wall documentary. Paul is by no means a hero. He
is a weak, ordinary career professional who, for most of his life,
played the part of the corporate lacky without the slightest qualm, so
that he could enjoy a comfortable life. It is only when he runs
up against Alain Fisher, his new boss, that he begins to evaluate his
life and see what is wrong with the world around him. He makes
half-hearted and ultimately futile attempts to redeem himself but none
of this can wash away the poison that is slowly devouring his soul.
Aware he lacks his superiors' ruthlessness, Paul begins to see himself
as a victim, and this is where the pent-up resentment finally becomes
too much to bear. So hideously true-to-life is Xavier Beauvois's
portrayal of Fisher that we grow to see his killing not as a senseless
act of violence but as a timely, well-deserved execution. Fisher epitomises all
that is rotten with the capitalist system, a vampiric fiend that has no
notion of human value and exists only to generate money for his
shareholders, heedless of the wider costs to society. How easy it
is to equate this monster with the faceless corporate monoliths that
now dominate the world of business, seemingly with scant regard for
their social obligations.
Yannick Renier's character Fabrice is strikingly similar to the one
that his younger brother Jérémie played in
Violence des échanges en milieu
tempéré - an idealistic young man who apparently
has no qualms about selling out to his corporate bosses. We can
readily see that Fabrice is the man that Paul was at the start of his
career, and perhaps it is the recognition of this that first makes Paul
aware of his failure. It is not Fisher that sends him spinning
out of control, but the sight of another young man being corrupted, as
he himself was, so it is not Fisher he grows to loath, but an entire
concept of the business world that he now sees as savage and
immoral. It is too late for Faust to recover his soul, but he can
give Mephistopheles a good kicking as he makes his way down to Hell.
Using a muted palette, which consists mostly of metallic greys,
Jean-Marc Moutout plunges us into a world that is relentlessly cold and
loveless, starkly evocative of the protagonist's sterile, colourless
existence. There are glimpses of personal happiness, fleeting
moments of release in the company of his family and friends, but
overwhelming the mood is depressing, and we can easily engage with
Paul's mounting despair and resentment as the walls of the corporate
machine he is trapped in slowly begin to fold in on him. No
murder can ever be justified, but so intensely do we come to identify
with the protagonist that in the end we are forced to see some justice
in the brutal crime he is ultimately driven to. Paul's crime is
not a mindless act of revenge, but a desperate attempt to hit back at a
system that is unequivocally diseased and dehumanising.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Jean-Marc Moutout film:
Violence des échanges en milieu tempéré (2003)