Film Review
Je suis le seigneur du château
is one of those strangely beguiling low-key films which at first sight
appears very slight but which soon strikes home as a profoundly moving,
rather unsettling work which ventures into some very dark
territory. It was the second film to be directed by Régis
Wargnier, whose next feature,
Indochine (1992) won him
critical acclaim and a brace of awards, including an Oscar, a BAFTA,
and five Césars.
In stark contrast to the opulence and scale of
Indochine,
Je suis le seigneur du château
is a much more understated and more tightly focused work. It is
about the the relationship between two young boys who are drawn into a
particularly nasty game of psychological warfare, a reaction to the
trauma of losing one parent through death and the fear of losing the
other through a second marriage. The film paints a brutal, rigorously
unsentimental picture of childhood, combining a harsh realism with an
alluringly poetic cinematic style which emphasises the immense
vulnerability of the protagonists and their capacity for malice - a shocking contrast with
the way in which children are usually depicted in cinema.
The direction is daring and inspired, with Wargnier showing much
greater restraint and sensitivity than in some of his later, more
ambitious films. The sombre photography of the Breton setting is
hauntingly beautiful, evoking the raw primitive savagery into which the
two young protagonists descend when the civilising influence of love is
denied them. What most sells the film are the compelling
naturalistic performances from the two lead child
actors - it's surprising that neither (Régis Arpin and David
Behar)
went on to pursue a film career since both are extraordinarily convincing in this film.
The only real fault with the film is Wargnier's bizarre choice of
music: Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliette. This very heavy and
intense music certainly manages to suggest the dismally dark
undercurrents and elemental forces which can lead only to tragedy, but
you can't help feeling that a more subtle, especially composed score
would have worked much better. (For British viewers, some
sequences of the film now look horribly like a parody trailer for Alan
Sugar's TV reality game show
The
Apprentice.) Despite this black mark,
Je suis le seigneur du château
still manages to be an effective and poignant piece of cinema,
unquestionably one of Régis Wargnier better films, and arguably
one of the most disturbing and authentic films about the trauma of childhood.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Régis Wargnier film:
Indochine (1992)
Film Synopsis
Brittany, 1954. After the death of his wife, wealthy
landowner Jean Béraud hires a governess, Madame Vernet, to take
care of his 10-year old son Thomas. Madame Vernet has recently
been widowed; her husband died fighting in Indochina, leaving her with
a son, Charles, who is the same age as Thomas. Not long after the
Vernets' arrival, Thomas begins to resent their presence and
immediately sets about tormenting Charles. As the boys' feuding
intensifies, they hardly notice the burgeoning romance between their
two lonely parents. When she realises the effect Thomas is having
on her son, Madame Vernet leaves the château with Charles,
determined never to return. A short time after, Jean, desperately
in love with Madame Vernet, tracks down Charles and pleads with him to
persuade her mother to return to him....
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.