Film Review
Les Passagers is a thought-provoking and hugely original film d'auteur from
director and former film critic Jean-Claude Guiguet. Through a series of inter-locking
vignettes involving vulnerable men and women looking for love in an increasingly loveless
world, the film makes some appropriate comments on the nature of our society. Whilst
not all of the observations are original, the poetic way in which Guiget makes his thesis
certainly is.
Les Passagers is an odd but appealing mix of the overtly political
and the intensely humanist - rather like a curious marriage of Godard and Truffaut.
(The connection with the latter is emphasised by Véronique Silver's pesence
as the film's narrator, a role she had in Truffaut's last but one film,
La Femme d'à côté).
Among the diverse themes the film addresses are the random behaviour of the AIDS
virus (which, unlike human beings, is totally non-discriminatory) and the destruction
wrought by industries which are driven solely by the need to increase profits, not for
the betterment of humanity. A beautifully composed work, this is a film which accurately
reflects a modern western society in which communities are fragmented, life is increasingly
uncertain and people find it harder and harder to communicate with one another.
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Claude Guiguet film:
Les Belles manières (1978)
Film Synopsis
Men and women, like lost souls, drift across Paris, their journeys made easier
and emptier by the new tramway system that carries them along with their
solemn thoughts and sad remembrances. It seems the world is more crowded
than ever, but in the midst of these milling crowds people no longer have
the desire to communicate. These passengers on life's trickle of despair
scarcely notice any of the unfamiliar faces around them and remain sealed
in their own little bubble, nurturing wounds that can never heal and dreams
that can never be. One young man is on his way to the grave of his
former lover, who recently died from AIDS. He thinks only of their
last few days together. Memories that sting more than they console.
Another man has chosen to marry the ugliest of woman because she has what
he most desires - a pair of perfect feet. A hospital worker coping
with depression does her best to cheer up a young colleague of hers who has
become disillusioned with life, while her daughter struggles to keep her
head above water as things become increasingly difficult for her. All
around these sad souls in transit there is little to encourage them.
Society is falling apart, people find it harder to connect and the AIDS epidemic
has become a mocking metaphor for a world that is locked in a spiral of ever-worsening
decline. As the canker spreads, so the sense of futility grows.
Hope is all that remains, but that also seems to be fading, like a dying
sun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.