Film Review
Since he made his directing debut twenty years ago with his whimsical comedy-drama
Les Cachetonneurs (1998),
Denis Dercourt has taken us down an increasingly dark road with a series
of fascinating but deeply unsettling studies on the perversities of human
nature. His most successful films so far -
La Tourneuse de pages
(2006) and
Demain dès l'aube
(2008) - both offer chilling explorations of obsession, and
Chair de ma
chair (2013) takes us into even grimmer territory with its portrait of
a cannibalistic serial killer.
With his latest and most off-kilter film,
Die Lehrerin, Dercourt
takes the concept of
huis close cinema to its extreme, with an ultra-minimalist
drama focused on the sadomasochistic relationship that develops between an
immigrant and a German language teacher. The director made the film
immediately after turning out a number of episodes of the Franco-German series
Deutsch-les-Landes for Amazon Prime and lacks the polish of his earlier
work.
The main point of interest of this low-budget offering is the extraordinary
rapport that develops between the two characters in the run of a seemingly
innocuous course of private tuition. Playing the leads are Julia Franzke
and Olivier Dovergne, two charismatic performers who convincingly enact a
weird master-servant game (oddly without sex) that is intensely compelling,
in spite of a script that looks as if it should have gone through at least
another three or four re-writes before going in front of the camera.
Dercourt claims he was inspired for this film by Pier Paolo Pasolini's
Salò,
or the 120 Days of Sodom (1975).
Working with a tighter production schedule and a massively reduced budget
may have felt like a worthwhile innovation at the time but the results are
not overly impressive. The film's rough and ready feel will no doubt
make it a harder sell than Dercourt's previous films, although it does have
a hard to pin down appeal. Flawed as it is with its occasional longueurs
and somewhat phoney dialogue,
Die Lehrerin still manages to hold
your attention.
The deliberately pared back mise-en-scene allows the two leads to take control
of the film in a way that is pretty rare these days. Mesmerising us
with their enigmatic personas, both actors bring a dangerous edge to their
performances. With this film, like some demonic alchemist from the Middle
Ages, Dercourt is able to distil the infernal essence of his previous cinematic
offerings into a residue of sickly malignancy. What he does with this
next is anyone's guess - just don't expect it to engender a musical comedy.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
On his arrival in Berlin, a young immigrant is seized by a burning desire
to start learning German. He has no difficulty finding a teacher willing
to help him in this endeavour, but she has a very peculiar method of instruction.
In the course of his education, the immigrant allows himself to become an
instrument in his teacher's increasingly perverse game of control and manipulation...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.