Film Review
Le Dernier des fous, the
second feature from French director Laurent Achard, offers a disturbing
yet heart-wrenching account of how a child's psychology and well-being
can be warped and destroyed by the world he inhabits.
The film is based on the provocative novel
The
Last of the Crazy People by the Canadian writer Timothy Findley
and garnered two prestigious awards in 2006: the Best Director award at
the Locarno Film Festival and the Jean Vigo Prize, an accolade that is
reserved for works of exceptional originality.
Plotwise, the film has some common ground with the classic slasher movies
Halloween (1978) and
Friday the 13th
(1980), particularly as the central character, the boy Martin, betrays not one
trace of emotion and has a sinister ghoul-like presence which makes the
gruesome denouement entirely predictable. Yet this is most
definitely not a slasher movie.
Rather, it is an intelligent piece of social drama which shows the extent to which a child's
actions, which may be totally incomprehensible to an adult, can be
directly attributed to the environment in which he grows up.
Although we see the world through the eyes of ten-year-old Martin, we
never know quite what impact his experiences are having on him.
We see him neglected and brutalised, unable to comprehend his older
brother's mood swings, his mother's mental decline and his father's
apparent indifference. We anticipate how the drama will end and
finally realise that the outcome is inevitable. No child that is
denied love can ever grow to appreciate the value of life, and some are bound to
stray down the dark path that leads to a bloody backlash. Why then are we
so inordinately shocked and surprised when such atrocities happen in real life?
As with his previous film,
Plus
qu'hier moins que demain (1998), Laurent Achard gives us a work
that is darkly poetic, combining stark realism with some unsettling
expressionistic flourishes.
Periodically, the placid calm of the
film, accentuated by its static camerawork and a complete lack of
music, is fractured by discordant sound and bursts of action which
violently jolts the spectator back to reality. We are reminded
that underneath the surface calm a storm is brewing, a storm that will
wreak devastation when it breaks. Martin's face may be as blank
and expressionless as a death mask, but we know what lies beneath - a
confused, fearful soul that has no comprehension of the significance of
life. Despite its narrative simplicity, slow pace and
somewhat superficial characterisation,
Le Dernier des fou manages to be an
arresting and throught-provoking piece of drama which
reminds us that evil is not born but nurtured, the result
of our failure to guide our children out of darkness.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Laurent Achard film:
Plus qu'hier moins que demain (1998)
Film Synopsis
Growing up on his parents' farm in rural France, 10-year-old Martin
becomes increasingly unsettled as he witnesses the slow disintegration
of his family. His mother, Nadège, has become so withdrawn
that she can no longer leave her bedroom. His older brother,
Didier, whom he idolises, is a struggling writer who becomes moody and
aggressive when his boyfriend leaves him to get married. Jean,
Martin's father, is incapable of holding his family together and
realises that he has no choice but to sell the farm.
Outwardly, Martin appears to be unscathed by what he sees. He
takes refuge in the company of those who give him comfort - his cat,
Mistigri, and the family's Moroccan maid, Malika. But no one can
know the torment and confusion which afflict Martin's inner
being, until one fatal day...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.