Film Review
In his most poignant and substantial film to date, André
Téchiné shows the impact that AIDS had on an unsuspecting
world through the complex and tortured relationships of five very
different individuals.
Les
Témoins is a thoughtful, skilfully composed essay on how
people react in different ways to the same crisis, in this case how
four friends of a young gay man cope with his slow and degrading death
from an incurable disease. Intense, perfectly judged performances
from a high calibre cast, together with a faultless screenplay, make
this one of the most powerful French dramas in recent years.
By not dwelling too heavily on the hideous reality of AIDS, but instead
showing its consequences on a group of people who are indirectly
affected by it, Téchiné avoids the cumbersome histrionics
and sentimentality that has befallen many an AIDS-themed film
drama. As in the director's earlier
Les Roseaux sauvages (1994), a
more upbeat but equally beguiling portrayal of human relationships,
Les Témoins combines an
enchanting visual lyricism with a startling, almost brutal, realism in
the way that people treat one another in stress situations. The
supreme elegance of the film's composition both belies and accentuates
the cruel nature of its subject matter.
As in all of Téchiné's films, none of the protagonists is
perfect, indeed every one of them has at least one fatal flaw. The
characters who, initially, appear to be strong and resourceful
ultimately disappoint us, whist those who first appeared weak and
ineffectual redeem themselves in the end through their humanity. The
prospect of death affects different people in different ways, and it is
only through death that an individual's love, both for the dying person
and for life in general, reveals itself fully.
Les
Témoins is an effective piece of social commentary on the
AIDS pandemic of the mid-80s, but it is far more than that. This
is a film that shows how, in a moment of crisis, true compassion can
assert itself and bring about a transformation of the soul. From
death and loss much good may ensue...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next André Téchiné film:
La Fille du RER (2009)
Film Synopsis
In the summer of 1984, a gay teenager named Manu arrives in Paris
looking for work. He stays with his sister, Julie, an aspiring
opera singer who rents a tiny room in a cheap hotel frequented by drug
addicts and prostitutes. Whilst cruising one evening, Manu meets
Adrien, a respectable doctor in his mid-fifties. Through Manu,
Adrien experiences a new lease of life, although his relationship with
the adolescent remains platonic. Adrien introduces Manu to his friend
Sarah, a writer struggling with her first novel, and her husband Mehdi,
a thick-skinned Algerian cop. When Mehdi saves Manu from drowning
one day, he experiences an unfamiliar attraction for the young
man. Aware of Mehdi's interest in him, Manu draws the macho cop
into a passionate love affair, which upsets Adrien profoundly.
After an absence of several weeks, Mehdi returns to visit Manu, who is
now employed as a caterer at a holiday camp, and notices a marked
change in his appearance and demeanour. It is obvious that
Manu is dying, but from what? Meanwhile, the news is
bombarded with reports of a strange and deadly new disease that is
sweeping the western world...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.