Film Review
For her first feature,
Noir et Blanc, director Claire Devers took
her inspiration from a 1948 short story by Tennesse Williams entitled
Desire
and the Black Masseur. Her film - which is as boldly sensual as
it is off-puttingly horrific - is luxuriously photographed in high contrast
black and white and offers a genuinely chilling study in self-destructive
obsession. The lack of both dialogue and conventional structure adds
to the film's frightening eeriness, and watching it you feel that you are
experiencing the weirdest of dreams, a dark fantasy of desire drawn from
the most profound depths of your subconscious mind.
Noir et Blanc sets itself apart from virtually every other film of
its time by virtue of its shocking subject matter (sadomasochism presented
at its rawest and most repellent) and its seductively arty stylisation.
Our appreciation of its artistic merits are constantly countered by our natural
revulsion to its content, and Devers not only challenges her audiences with
stark images of a man deriving sexual gratification from intense physical
pain, she wilfully tortures them, making herself a kind of implacable dominatrix
of her own morbid fantasy.
The relationship between the filmmaker and the viewer quickly acquires a
sadomasochistic dimension, resonating with what we see on the screen.
We derive pain and pleasure from watching the film, it gratifies us and yet
it revolts us. We just cannot stop ourselves from watching as we grimly
anticipate the inevitable conclusion of Antoine's nihilistic fantasy.
For this startling first film, Claire Devers received the Caméra d'or
at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival and the Grand Prix at the Turin Film Festival
that same year. She went on to direct some other worthwhile (albeit
far more conventional) films, most notably
Max et Jérémie
(1992) and
Les Marins perdus
(2003).
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Claire Devers film:
Les Marins perdus (2003)
Film Synopsis
Antoine is a boring young accountant who leads a boring humdrum existence.
For his latest assignment, he is sent to a sports centre to sort out the
company's accounts. A shy and nervous man by nature, Antoine initially
keeps himself to himself, but curiosity gets the better of him and he is
soon trying out the centre's facilities. He gets into the bodybuilding
habit and becomes aware of his physique for possibly the first time in his
life. Next he is enjoying the delights of an all-over massage, expertly
administered by a well-built African man named Dominique. This is the
beginning of a strange and troubling relationship between the two men, one
white as alabaster, the other black as pure ebony.
Antoine encourages Dominique to beat him with increasing violence, savouring
the agony that is inflicted on his body by his powerful tormentor.
Even after being hospitalised with an injury sustained in the course of one
of these sadomasochistic sessions, Antoine cannot stop himself from going
further down this destructive path. His wife Édith becomes ever
more concerned by her husband's strange behaviour, but he cannot bring himself
to talk about his mysterious obsession. Once his injuries have healed,
Antoine is soon resuming his violent sessions with Dominique. Totally
addicted to the pleasure of physical pain, the accountant urges the masseur
to subject him to the ultimate agony, which can only be achieved by his body
being ripped apart...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.