Rapt (2009)
Directed by Lucas Belvaux

Drama / Thriller
aka: Rapt!

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Rapt (2009)
In Rapt, film director Lucas Belvaux continues his unflinching commentary on the dehumanising effect of greed and self-interest in contemporary society which he began with La Raison du plus faible, but from the other end of the social spectrum.  Here, the central protagonist is not a hard-pressed worker who looks like a refugee from a Ken Loach film but a filthy rich financier and fully paid-up member of the haute bourgeoise.   Inspired by the real-life abduction of Baron Edouard-Jean Empain in 1978, the film portrays one privileged man's slow and humiliating descent into Hell, contrasting his brutal treatment at the hands of a group of thuggish kidnappers with the monstrous behaviour of his family and his colleagues when his embarrassing peccadillos enter the public domain via a media-led feeding frenzy.

Rapt is arguably Lucas Belvaux's most powerful piece of cinema to date, even bleaker and more visceral than the stylishly gritty Cavale segment of his critically acclaimed Trilogie (2002).  What is perhaps most remarkable about this film is that the protagonist is not one we would ordinarily sympathise with.  Played by Yvan Attal at his best, Stanislas Graff is an arrogant hedonistic aristocrat who casually abuses his wealth and power for his own amusement.  Surely he deserves everything he gets?  But in the course of watching Graff's degrading decline to the state of a virtual animal and seeing his dignity utterly wiped away we cannot help feeling pity for him and anger at the way he is being treated.  As the inhumanity of the world around him becomes more and more evident, Graff's own humanity is revealed to us and he becomes very nearly a modern martyr, a pitiful wretch who ends up being stripped of his pride, his status, his wealth and, ultimately, his identity.  

With his exceptional flair for mixing genres (here noir-like thriller melded with social satire), Belvaux crafts a chilling and memorable fable for our times, one which explores the duplicity of individuals, the venality of corporate culture and the power of the media to totally destroy people's lives. Yvan Attal's committed portrayal of the central character is harrowing in its realism, a gut-wrenching tour de force that throws into sharp relief the cruelty and viciousness that exists within our society - not just in the heads of violent criminals, but also in the boardroom, the newspaper offices, even the family home.  Rapt is an intensely provocative reflection of a society that has lost both its moral compass and its soul.  It was both a notable critical and commercial success, receiving four César nominations in 2010 - in the categories of Best Film, Best Director, Best Actor (Attal) and Best Supporting Actress (Anne Consigny).
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Lucas Belvaux film:
38 témoins (2012)

Film Synopsis

Successful businessman Stanislas Graff discovers the true meaning of horror when a band of thugs kidnap him and subject him to the most degrading and brutal period of captivity.  Graff refuses to crack and instead chooses to endure this barbarity with courage and dignity.  When he is finally released he faces an even greater ordeal.  Everyone seems to have found out every sordid detail of his private life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Lucas Belvaux
  • Script: Lucas Belvaux
  • Cinematographer: Pierre Milon
  • Cast: Yvan Attal (Stanislas Graff), Anne Consigny (Françoise Graff), André Marcon (André Peyrac), Françoise Fabian (Marjorie), Alex Descas (Me Walser), Michel Voïta (Le commissaire Paoli), Gérard Meylan (Le Marseillais), Philippe Chaine (Conseiller ministeriel), Corentin Lobet, Vincent Nemeth (Le Juge), Nicolas Pignon
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 125 min
  • Aka: Rapt!

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