Film Review
Having made a promising directorial debut with his distinctive social
drama
Ultranova (2005), Bouli
Lanners takes us on another walk on the wild side, Belgian style, in
a film that is every bit as quirky and indefinable as his first.
Part road-movie, part buddy-movie (but quite unlike any film you will
have seen in either of these genres),
Eldorado
depicts the uncomfortable friendship that develops between a
middle-aged loner (played by Lanners, a more than capable screen actor) and
a young drifter.
Both of the two leading protagonists look as if they have no idea where
their lives are heading; their chance meeting seems to give them both a
sense of direction, at least temporarily. As they traverse the
oddly forbidding Belgian countryside, ostensibly to visit the younger
man's parents, they encounter all manner of bizarre individuals,
including a shopkeeper who lets his customers take what they want
without paying, a sicko who wants to get rid of his dog and a nude caravan
owner who casually introduces himself as Alain Delon. No, I am
not making this up.
Eldorado is unusual enough
(and short enough) to make it an easy watch. Anyone who has ever
subjected himself to Rémy Belvaux's
C'est
arrivé près de chez vous (1992) will know that
Belgian humour is quite unlike that of any other nation on Earth.
It's not the kind of humour that's intended to make you laugh.
Rather, it's the kind that compels you to back away slowly and quietly
to the nearest phone box where you hastily call for reinforcements
from the nearest lunatic asylum. The film will easily hold your
attention but once the end credits start rolling you wonder what on
Earth it was all meant to be about. Is this supposed to be a
metaphor for life - an accumulation of bizarre random experiences that
ultimately adds up to nothing?
Whatever its premise, there is much to like about this eccentric little film - its wry
humour, which slips into dark surrealist comedy at the least
provocation; its sympathetic but ever-so-slightly scary principal characters,
who say far more with their eyes and body gestures than with their
mouths (a typically Belgian trait); and the erratic switching between
static and moving camera shots, which adds to the growing sense
that we are being projected further and faster into a crumbling inner world.
The abrupt downbeat ending looks as if it could have been dreamed up by
Albert Camus on a particularly grim day, since it shrieks with the absurdity and pointlessness
of existence. A man buries a friendship by burying a dog.
Is there a deep and subtle meaning to this?
Or is Bouli Lanners merely in the employ of the Belgian tourist board,
hired to persuade us that his country is a far more weird place
than we had ever dared to imagine?
Eldorado is a film that is simply
too off-the-wall to dislike with any real passion, but
it probably makes much more sense if you have an advanced degree in French
existentialist philosophy, know something about Belgian culture,
or like dogs.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Yvan is a forty-something loner who buys and sells vintage cars. When
a younger man, Elie, breaks into his house, Yvan has a good excuse to
fly off the handle. He doesn't. Instead, he takes an
immediate liking to the stranger and offers to take him to his parents
in his old Chevrolet. A strange friendship develops between the
two men who are different in so many ways...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.