Film Review
Three years after she wowed the critics with her debut feature
Belle
épine (2010), director Rebecca Zlotowski takes the nuclear
option for her second film, drawing an analogy between love and
radioactive contamination that is about as subtle and tasteful as a
fluorescent green tie at a Mormon funeral. In contrast to the
confident sparsity of Zlotowski's first cinematic offering, a
coming-of-age flick that blazes with insight and panache,
Grand central feels self-conscious
and too well-oiled, weighed down by cumbersome clichés and a
script that has patently gone through far too many re-writes.
Like a nuclear power station, it impresses from a distance, but you are
somewhat reluctant to get too near to it.
The film's power derives from its stark visuals, which powerfully evoke
a precarious world that few of us will ever witness, and the magnetic
performances of its two lead actors. But this power is diminished
by Zlotowski's tendency to overstate her observations, instead of
allowing the spectator to tease out and interpret for himself whatever
hidden messages the film might contain. Caught in the rift
between a hard-hitting social drama and a stylised romantic intrigue
(the classic French love triangle),
Grand
central has some touches of brilliance, but these are rapidly
dissipated as the plot trudges along, far too mechanically, towards it
predictable conclusion, accompanied by an oppressive soundtrack that
soon becomes wearisome.
Having shown herself to be an actress of the first rank in Zlotowski's
first film, Léa Seydoux once again captivates us, this time as a
sensual modern femme fatale who proves to be as deadly as a cracked
nuclear reactor (only a lot easier on the eye). Impressive though
her performance is, Seydoux's character is less fully developed, and
therefore less convincing, than that of her co-star Tahar Rahim, here
excelling in his best role since his award-winning turn in Jacques
Audiard's
Un prophète
(2009). Admirably well-suited for playing ambiguous marginal
characters, Rahim reveals a more sensitive and humane side in this
film, bringing a reality to his low-life portrayal that is at times
astoundingly visceral. There are some fine contributions from the
exemplary supporting cast (Denis Ménochet, Johan
Libéreau, Olivier Gourmet and Camille Lellouche), but it is the duo
formed by Seydoux and Rahim that virtually monopolises our attention.
Despite the strong performances, the romantic strand to the narrative
is the least satisfying element of the film, perhaps because it
relies too heavily on familiar cinematic clichés and fails to go
much beyond the mundane. Far more convincing are the group scenes
set in the employees' makeshift camp and the sequences in the nuclear
power plant, which have a near-documentary realism and providing a
stark counterpoint with one another - camaraderie in a humane setting
juxtaposed against blatant exploitation in the most alien of
environments. Wisely, Zlotowski stays well clear of the debate
over the rights and wrongs of nuclear power, but her film offers some
pertinent messages on the extent to which workers' rights have been
eroded in recent years in the push for profit.
Grand central is too glib and
demonstrative to convey its subtext effectively, too laboured to
satisfy as a piece of drama, but it nonetheless manages to leave a
lasting impression and reaffirms Rebecca Zlotowski's status as one of
France's most promising auteur filmmakers.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After a succession of odd jobs, Gary finds work in a nuclear power
plant. Here, near to the reactors where the radiation level is at
its strongest, he falls in love with co-worker Karole. Unfortunately,
she is already married - to a man named Toni. Before long, Gary is
contaminated on two fronts - by
radiation and a forbidden love - and in both cases he soon finds himself in the danger zone...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.