Film Review
Of all the emotions, fear is arguably the one that is most difficult to
fake convincingly, which is perhaps why most films that rely on fear to
create tension and suspense often end up appearing faintly camp and
absurd. The most striking characteristic of Fabrice Gobert's
debut feature
Simon Werner a disparu...
is how authentically it evokes a climate of fear amid a group of
over-imaginative teenagers in a small suburban community. At the
start of the film, it is revealed that a college student has gone
missing. Straight away, the boy's classmates begin to formulate
wild speculations as to what may have happened to him, and in no time
they all become prey to their worst imaginings. It is as if
Friday the 13th has suddenly
become a terrible reality, and as more of the students go missing the
vice-like grip of paranoia tightens to terrifying proportions. It
is a truism that the world is at its scariest when you are a teenager,
and Gobert's daring and inspired film reminds us of this fact with a
cruel, mocking relish.
The similarities with Gus Van Sant's
Elephant
(2003) are not hard to miss. Not only is Gobert's film set in the
same milieu, it also borrows the structure of Van Sant's film - four
segments, each depicting events from the point of view of one
characters. It is an old technique and Van Sant certainly did not
event it - the great Japanese cineaste Akira Kurosawa used it to great
effect on his 1950 masterpiece
Rashomon and Belgian filmmaker
Lucas Belvaux did it justice with his acclaimed 2002
Trilogie.
Gobert's innovation is to adopt a subtly different style of
mise-en-scène for each of the segments, each reflecting the
personality of the leading character. For instance, Rabier, the
most introverted and solitary of the protagonists, is seen mostly in
long and mid-shot, reminding us that he is very much the outsider in
the group, and consequently the most enigmatic and sinister.
Another inspiration that is readily apparent is David Lynch's
Blue Velvet (1986), most
visibly through the setting - a seemingly safe middle class haven
beneath which something sinister and dangerous obviously lurks.
By setting the story in the early 1990s, Gobert gives his protagonists
a greater sense of vulnerability by denuding them of mobile phones,
tablets and all those other wonderful of gadgets which now connect
every teenager on the planet to every other teenager.
Simon Werner a disparu...
effectively combines the elements of the classic teen movie and slasher
movie but it has a very distinctive identity that sets it apart from
such well-worn genre offerings. The constantly roving camera
conveys an unrelenting sense of restlessness and the artificial
autumnal lighting lends a subtle hint of nightmarish unreality that adds
to the imperceptibly mounting mood of oppression. It is a pity
that the stylistic flair that Gobert shows in his mise-en-scène
is not so apparent in his screenplay, which is hampered by
clichés, a general lack of narrative coherence and a hurried
denouement that fails to be entirely satisfying.
To some extent, the shortcomings on the writing front are masked by the
stark realism of the performances from a talented ensemble of largely
inexperienced actors. Making her presence felt in her first
significant film role is Ana Girardot, daughter of the distinguished
screen actor Hippolyte Girardot, and the charismatic Jules
Pélissier similarly looks as if he might be destined for better
things. More than anything, it is the authentic nature of the
character portrayals that makes
Simon
Werner a disparu... such a memorable and compelling film. By
drawing on many familiar influences, Fabrice Gobert manages to create
an original piece of cinema that offers the most truthful and
disturbing portrayal of adolescence that French cinema has given us in years.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In March 1992, a small town just outside Paris is seized by fear and suspicion
as a result of a series of seemingly inexplicable disappearances.
It all began when a teenage boy named Simon Werner suddenly went missing.
All that the police had to go on were a few drops of blood found in his classroom.
For days afterwards, Simon's disappearance became the only topic of conversation
among his classmates. Was he kidnapped? Has he committed suicide?
Or has he just run away from home? The other possibility - that he
has been murdered - wasn't overlooked. It was only a few days
later before a second pupil in the same class went missing, and then a third.
The only thing that connects the three missing teenagers is that they were
in the same class in the same school. The police are completely stumped
and a mood of barely contained anguish pervades the district as further developments
are anticipated. Then, one evening, a group of drunken adolescents
are messing about in the woods when they stumble across a lifeless body...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.