Film Review
Orage, Fabrice Camoin's first
feature, is loosely based on Marguerite Duras's 1960 novel
Dix heures et demie du soir en
été, which had previously been adapted for cinema
by Jules Dassin as
10:30 P.M. Summer
(1966). Camoin is by no means fresh to the movie business - he
has already directed two short films and been busy over the past decade
and a half working as an assistant on films for cinema and television,
including Arnaud Viard's
Clara et moi (2004) and
Léa Fazer's
Notre univers impitoyable
(2008). His first feature is a distinctive variation on the road
movie theme which shows some promise on the directing side, although
the film is somewhat let down by a fairly vacuous script that is
disappointingly lacking in character depth and dramatic impact.
Camoin broaches several important contemporary themes in his debut
offering, notably racism, but these are dealt with half-heartedly as
the film's author struggles to come up with something meaningful to
say. The characters are pretty stereotypical but the chemistry
between the leads Marine Foïs and Sami Bouajila helps to at least
partially redeem a film that is at times unbearably overwrought and
lacking in direction. Marine Foïs is particularly convincing
as a middle-aged woman who has lost her zest for living and embraces a
somewhat perverse way out of present woes. Bouajila is an easy
shoe-in for a somewhat two-dimensional character but he makes an
effective counterpoint to Foïs's more ambiguous and more
disturbing Marie. Louis-Do de Lencquesaing and Valérie
Donzelli are both completely wasted in archetypal roles that have no
depth whatever and fail to engage our sympathies.
Aside from the surprisingly effective Foïs-Bouajila pairing,
Orage's main asset is its peculiar
atmosphere - a brooding, sustained sense of claustrophobia which it
derives from Camoin's decision to shoot most of the film in
close-up. This has the effect of tying the two main characters
together, emphasising their mutual dependency as they seek escape from
a present that threatens to crush them. There is no physical
attachment, yet they become as chained to one another as Tony Curtis
and Sidney Poitier in Stanley Kramer's
The
Defiant Ones (1958). If only more effort had gone into
the script,
Orage could have
been a powerfully moving study in identity, but, lacking in substance
though it is, it still manages to hold the attention, thanks to its
strong central performances.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Marie is en route for a holiday in the sun with her husband Pierre,
daughter Judith and sister Louise when they get caught in a violent
rainstorm. Forced to break their journey, they take refuge in a
hotel in a small town close to the Spanish border. This same day,
the police are out in force, hunting a man named Nabil Malek who has
just murdered his wife and her lover. As she contemplates her own
unfulfilled existence, Marie, an alcoholic depressive, catches a
glimpse of the fugitive and approaches him. She offers to hide
him and then, seeing an easy way out of her own problems, she talks him
into fleeing with her to Morocco. Confused as to Marie's motives
for helping him, Malek has no option but to put his trust in her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.