Film Review
Les Amants du Pont-Neuf
(1991) may have been a major critical success and a career-defining work
but for its director, thirty year old Leos Carax, its prodigious overspend
and protracted production schedule left deep scars that would take a long
time to heal. It was eight years before Carax attempted to make another
feature-length film, and when he did so that film - the enigmatically titled
Pola X - revealed much about his personal angst and revulsion for
his earlier work. In the intervening years, Carax had matured and become
far more critical of himself and the world around him. The catalyst
for this transformation was the Bosnian War in the early to mid 1990s, which
had a profound impact on the young filmmaker. He spent several months
in Bosnia, witnessing for himself the terrible humanitarian disaster which
the West was apparently unable to come to grips with. It was another
Holocaust, another attempt by one group of people to wipe out another, and
yet no one seemed to care. This monstrous indifference was the inspiration
for
Pola X, Carax's most personal, most self-indulgent and possibly
most worthy film.
Pola X is a modern interpretation of a story by Herman Melville entitled
Pierre, or The Ambiguities, first published in 1852. The film
derives its name from the acronym of the novel's French language title
-
Pierre Ou Les Ambiguïtés - with X denoting the fact
that the screenplay went through ten drafts. Melville's book was scandalous
for its time and remains one of the author's least known and least understood
works. Carax takes the essence of Melville's lurid Gothic satire and,
bringing it forward a hundred and fifty years, turns it into a dark and twisted
commentary on life in Western Europe at the end of the 20th century.
Here, Carax seasons his obvious revulsion for the West's apathy towards the
Bosnian situation (and ill-regard for immigrants/refugees in general) with
an honest and typically flamboyant expression of his own personal struggle
for artistic integrity. The fragmentary nature of the world as Carax
sees it - rigidly divided into the haves and the have-nots, those who belong
and those who do not - is reflected in the fragmented personality of the
central protagonist Pierre (a character clearly fashioned after Carax's own
hard-to-pin-down likeness). When we first see Pierre (no other actor
was better suited for the role than Guillaume Depardieu), he is like something
out of a children's fairytale, living the gracious life in a castle with
his beautiful regal mother (Catherine Deneuve,
naturellement).
Pierre has made his name as a writer and is about to wed a girl of divine
beauty. His life is the very acme of human happiness - and then it
is suddenly torn from him, his identity shattered through a chance encounter
with a fugitive of the Bosnian conflict who claims to be his sister.
After a weirdly Gothic encounter, a long monologue which makes up the strangest
and most poetic sequence of any Leos Carax film, Pierre suddenly finds he
is another person, living in another world. Gone is the castle and
its verdant countryside setting. Now he finds himself in the midst
of Stygian nightmare, an outsider in Paris's lower depths, coping with insecurity
and rejection. Now he is on the other side of the fence, experiencing
life at its most raw and unjust. Like the Bosnian refugee girl he is
soul-bonded to, he is a mere unwanted fragment of human detritus. He
hardly seems to exist. In fact he doesn't. Welcome to life on
the margins.
As Pierre's physical and mental state worsen, so the film becomes increasingly
unhinged, prone to the kind of wild auteur excesses that even Carax would
have shied away from in former years. Bizarre dream sequences punctuate
a brazenly unfocussed narrative that becomes ever more unreal and disjointed,
and exhilarating as this chaotic joyride is, it is profoundly unsettling.
Mixed feelings of revulsion and sympathy creep into your veins as you watch
Pierre go through his insane ritual of purification - reaching for some glimmer
of truth in the darkness, but becoming more of the ignorant savage as he
does so, the trammels of bourgeois conditioning slipping off him like layers
of dead skin from a snake. The tragedy is that Pierre's painful process
of spiritual cleansing and consequent self-martyrdom lead no where.
A man loses his mind and the world remains as insane as ever.
The casting of Guillaume Depardieu as the self-destructive artist Pierre
is as inspired as it is eerily prophetic. Like Pierre, Depardieu was
born to the privileged life and seemed destined to follow in his father Gérard's
footsteps to become one of his generation's most respected screen actors.
But fame, easy money and professional success were never enough for Depardieu
Junior and his adult life was marked by crisis, controversy and misfortune,
culminating in his premature death in 2008 at the age of 37. Guillaume
Depardieu's fall was by no means as perverse and spectacular as that of the
character he plays so vividly in Carax's film, but it is curious how one
should mirror the other. This lends a deeper poignancy to
Pola X
which it certainly didn't have when it was first seen.
Not long after the film's cinematic release in 1999 (when it met with a mixed
critical reaction and was not a commercial success), Leos Carax developed
a longer version, which was aired on the French-German television channel
Arte in 2001. Divided into three episodes, this was titled
Pierre
ou les ambiguïtés and has an extra forty minutes of content.
A stark visual allegory which shows Carax at his most daring and politically
involved,
Pola X provides a mocking but apt fresco of our time - and,
a decade and a half after it was made, how remarkable, and how depressing,
that it should have an even greater resonance. The fissure that divides
our civilisation still exists, and it grows wider and deeper each day.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Leos Carax film:
Tokyo! (2008)
Film Synopsis
Pierre is a successful young writer who enjoys a privileged, carefree existence
with his mother Marie at their grand Normandy château. He is
soon to be married to Lucie and he fills his empty hours by working on his second
novel. One evening, Marie casually informs her son that she has fixed
the date of his wedding, and he duly hurries off to tell his fiancée.
As he crosses a forest in darkness a woman's voice calls out to him.
A
dishevelled girl appears out of the gloom
and insists that she is his forgotten sister. As Isabelle tells her
tragic tale, Pierre realises that she is his father's illegitimate daughter,
the result of a liaison with an East European woman when he was serving as
a French diplomat. With a suddenness that shocks those closest to him,
Pierre turns his back on his comfortable bourgeois life and moves to Paris
to live with Isabelle. Unable to find a hotel willing to accommodate
illegal immigrants, Pierre and Isabelle end up living in a cold, squalid
warehouse, where they pursue an intense love affair. As Pierre labours
intensely on his novel his mental state deteriorates further and he is haunted
by strange visions. He is driven over the edge when he learns that
his best friend Thibault has betrayed him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.