Film Review
Director Bruno Dumont is no stranger to controversy. Having
ruffled feathers on several continents with his highly idiosyncratic
and provocative brand of auteur cinema which often depicts human beings
with a shocking savagery, he risks further alienation with his latest
film, in which he makes an uncompromising connection between Christian
devotion and Islamic fanaticism. Dumont's films all deal with
human perversions of one kind or another and
Hadewijch, his fifth and
most topical film to date, is no exception. This is a film which
confronts head-on the perversity of obsessive religiosity, possibly the
most dangerous, most prevalent perversion of them all.
The film takes its title from the name of a 13th Century poet and
mystic, Hadewijch of Antwerp, whose spirit appears to have been
incarnated as the film's main protagonist, a fragile modern day
adolescent named Céline. The latter's longing for the
absolute consumes her to the extent that she withdraws totally and
subjects herself to physical and emotional pain in an attempt to prove
that she is a worthy bride of Christ. Even the Catholic nuns who
lodge her find her a scary proposition and have no option but to send
her back into the real world. It is in the real world that
Céline's devotion takes a turn for the sinister.
With only the most tenuous grip on reality, she rejects true love when
it is sincerely offered to her by one man and instead falls under the
spell of an Islamist who sees her as an easy recruit to jihad.
Although Céline's rapid conversion from self-mortifying
Christian to wannabe terrorist is not entirely convincing, the film
does offer a sobering reminder of the ease with which religious
devotion can be perverted for evil ends.
Dumont's own personal aversion to religion becomes glaringly apparent
when we get to the part of the film in which Islamic fundamentalism
rears its ugly head. However, religious antipathy does not
prevent the director from engaging with his heroine and portraying her
in a compassionate and realistic light. Céline is
not, as is sometimes the case in Dumont's films, a hollow
two-dimensional representation of an idea, but a fully formed human being that we can
sympathise with. In a remarkable acting debut, Julie
Sokolowski subtly exposes the soul of a young woman who is so totally
overwhelmed by her love of the Divine that she is incapable of forming
any attachment to the physical world that surrounds her. It is a
remarkable portrayal of innocence and devotion, one that simultaneously
conveys the tragic vulnerability of Robert Bresson's
Mouchette and the unshakeable
conviction of Carl Dreyer's
Joan of Arc.
Sokolowski has such a powerful screen presence that she completely
monopolises our attention. The other characters are, almost
without exception, cast into the shadows and make very little
impression. One of the shortcomings of this film is that
Dumont invests so much in his central protagonist that few of the
others fail to be more than thinly sketched stereotypes. The one
exception is Yassine, the likeable young Arab man who attempts
unsuccessfully to draw Céline into the romance that might have
been her salvation. Yassine's frustration reveals a humanity and
love of life that Céline appears to have long surrendered in her
quest for the absolute. That Céline is ultimately redeemed
is at least partly down to Yassine's influence, such is the inviolable
power of human love.
Dumont's austere visual style and sparse mise en scène are perfectly suited for the
subject of this contemplative drama, the slow pace and minimalist composition making
it easy for the spectator to be drawn into Céline's complex
inner world and gain an insight into her troubled psychology and
intense spiritual yearning. The only sin that Dumont commits is
attempting to weave in a secondary narrative strand that seems to have
no connection whatever with the main storyline (the confluence does
occur, but only right at the end of the film in a truly baffling coda). This gratuitous
narrative hopping serves no real purpose and merely provides an
unwelcome distraction from what is an otherwise gripping account of
delusion, corruption and redemption. Just as Dumont's previous
film
Flandres offered a timely
reflection on the futility and barbarity of war, so
Hadewijch eloquently engages with
another major theme of our time, the insidious threat of religious
fanaticism.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Bruno Dumont film:
Hors Satan (2011)
Film Synopsis
A mother superior is so shocked by the manic faith of one of her
novices that she has no choice but to expel her from the
convent. Rejoining the outside world, Céline makes an attempt to fashion
herself as an ordinary Parisian girl. However, her obsessive devotion to God and a
meeting with Arab brothers Yassine and Nassir soon lead her down a very dangerous
path...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.