Film Review
The immense personal toll of political office is powerfully evoked in
this stylish, unsettling and, at times, downright weird film from
director Pierre Schöller. This is Schöller's second
film and it could hardly be more different from his debut feature
Versailles
(2008), an arresting drama centred on the unlikely friendship between a
homeless man and an abandoned child. The only thing that connects
the two films is the delicate humanity with which Schöller handles
his subject.
L'Exercice de
l'État (aka
The
Minister) is no broad-brush satire of the kind that resorts to
facile caricature and strained exaggeration to get easy laughs.
Instead, it makes a serious attempt to get under the skin of the career
politician, to expose the Faustian conflict between ambition and
personal beliefs that has wrecked many a promising political career
whilst giving a real sense of the unremitting pressure government
ministers are under as they try to meet the challenges of their
job. The film comes on the back of two other French film
portraits of political life - Xavier Durringer's
La Conquête (2011) and Alain
Cavalier's
Pater (2011).
Whilst Durringer's film has attracted most attention by virtue of its
subject (a humorous portrayal of President Nicholas Sarkozy's rise to
power) and Cavalier's is the most experimental, neither of these films
can match the visual artistry, narrative flair and authenticity of
Schöller's, which offers a far more nuanced and rigorous depiction
of a life in politics (albeit from a humorous perspective).
Avoiding any direct reference to France's present political figures (a
wise move given how unpopular they all are at the moment), the film
follows the fortunes of a fictitious transport minister, Bertrand
Saint-Jean (superbly portrayed by Olivier Gourmet), and casts him as a
modern tragic hero as he proves himself singularly ill-equipped to live
up to the demands of his job. Saint-Jean's stamina and moral
fibre are put to the test by a seemingly unending series of disasters
and sly political manoeuvres that slowly whittle away his convictions
and diminish him as a human being, until he ends up, as virtually all
politicians do, as a mere warped shadow of his former self.
Nowadays, politicians rarely (if ever) arouse our sympathy.
Perhaps unduly influenced by the popular press (which loves nothing
better than to destroy public figures), we are quick to condemn their
personal failings and the apparent ease with which they abandon their
principles for personal advantage. What is particularly notable
about Schöller's film is that, whilst presenting politicians as
deeply flawed, it never allows us to forget that they are human, and
perhaps far more deserving of our pity than we are willing to admit.
Whilst
L'Exercice de l'État
is very much anchored in the real world (shockingly so in a few
scenes), there is an abundance of humour (mostly of the dry, caustic
variety) and some totally unexpected excursions into surrealism, the
latter of which take us into the central character's troubled inner
world. The film opens with a truly bizarre sequence in which a
naked woman allows herself to be swallowed up by a crocodile. An
obvious allusion to the close liaison between power and eroticism which
has marred many a political career, this sequence also serves as a
metaphor for Saint-Jean's willingness to allow his better side to be
devoured by his greedy political ambitions. It is not the
minister's political opponents or the cruel workings of fate that
savagely chew him up, but his inability to hold onto his convictions in
the face of unremitting hostility from those around him.
Saint-Jean's mettle is assailed again and again, and each time he is
compelled to surrender something of himself. The minister is
far from being a sympathetic character, and at times his ineptitude and
duplicity are laughable, but Olivier Gourmet's unstintingly humane
portrayal of him compels us to feel for him and share his private
sorrow as his dreams turn to dust before his eyes. Many
films have sought to enter the murky world of political chicanery and
shed light on the tortuous psychology of the career politician, but
few have quite the resonance of
L'Exercice de l'État.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Bertrand Saint-Jean is France's Minister of Transport, an ambitious man who
manages to keep his head in an emergency - or so he thinks. He has
a small crisis on his hands when, late one evening, he is woken up by his
cabinet chief, Gilles, and informed that a coach has just skidded off the
road into a ravine in the Ardennes. Fully briefed, Saint-Jean sets
out to take charge of the situation, with a well-prepared speech ready for
when the media get to him. A radio interview gives him an opportunity
for him to set out his position regarding the privatisation of the railways,
but not long afterwards he is flatly contradicted by one of his ministerial
colleagues.
By now it is apparent to Saint-Jean that professional rivalries are not only
threatening his own position, they also risk fragmenting the government and
plunging the whole country into chaos. The Prime Minister acts to heal
the rift that is growing between his ministers, who each seems to be pursuing
his own private agenda. Caught up in this murky in-fighting, Saint-Jean
finds himself tasked with bringing forward the government's controversial
privatisation plans. This could be the thing that will make or break
his political career...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.