Film Review
One of the most auspicious directing debuts of 2012 is that of
Christophe Sahr, who, ten years after he wrote the first draft of his
screenplay, finally succeeded in bringing his modern take on
Dostoyevsky's
Crime and Punishment
to the big screen. It is not hard to see why Sahr had such
difficulty finding a financial backer for his film.
Voie rapide is a genre-spanning
oddity, having elements of social realist and psychological drama
without fitting easily into either of these categories. That Sahr
has been influenced by American cinema is evident both in the fast car
theme that propels the narrative and the subtle allusions to Nicholas
Ray's
Rebel without a Cause
(1955). Yet the film is far from being a conventional homage and
it treads what seems to be familiar territory with noteworthy flair and
originality.
The central plot idea is one that has been exhaustively used
before. A man commits a crime, thinks nothing of it at first, but
is slowly eaten away by guilt and is ultimately driven to seek
redemption. The setting is also familiar: the run-down, over
populated suburbs of Paris, where hope is as scarce as money.
That Christophe Sahr was able to take these two well-worn themes and
meld them into something fresh and distinctive testifies to his promise
as a filmmaker. The film has its failings - some of the plot
developments are a little hard to swallow and there is a slight surfeit
of artistic over-indulgence in a few sequences - but these are readily
forgiven on account of the stark elegance of the mise-en-scène and the
authenticity that leaps off the
screen throughout much of the film.
What makes
Voie rapide such
an effective and rewarding film is that it avoids all the obvious
pitfalls and contents itself with telling a simple story without
getting mired in sentimentality and stylistic artifice. In
contrast to many of today's social realist dramas, which resort to
patronising clichés or over-earnest political posturing, this
film presents an honest account of what it is like for today's young
people to live on the margins, making the best of what life has to
offer and coping with the problems of day to day existence without
descending into soap-style hysteria. Alex's need for escape is
something we can readily identify with. It is obvious that he was
forced into fatherhood before he was mature enough to cope with the
responsibilities that this entails. So, still saddled with the
mentality of a selfish teenager, he makes his Honda Civic his mistress,
lavishing all of his spare time and hard earned cash on her, to the
detriment of his partner and their toddler.
Alex, a self-absorbed and generally charmless character, would be
extremely hard to engage with were it not for the fact he is portrayed
with such realism and intensity by Johan Libéreau. An
actor highly valued by auteur filmmakers, Libéreau previously
drew considerable acclaim (and was nominated for the Most Promising
Actor César) for his work on André
Téchiné's
Les Témoins
(2007). Like James Dean in Nicolas Ray's celebrated film, Alex is
an egoistical urban rebel who is clearly set on a self-destructive
course, driven by an obsessive yearning for speed so that he can escape
from the life that is obviously too slow and tame for him. What
makes Libéreau's portrayal of Alex so compelling is that he
reveals so little of what is going on in the character's mind.
Alex finds it hard to speak, and even harder to express himself
emotionally. When he knocks down a hapless pedestrian in the
course of one of his nocturnal motorway joy rides, his apparent lack of
concern is shocking. It is only when Alex has had time to reflect
on what he has done and guilt begins to assert itself that his true
character begins to emerge. Alex's subsequent inner journey
towards redemption is all the more poignant for the way that
Libéreau underplays it, almost as if he himself is ill-equipped
to handle the emotional burden that Sahr places on his shoulders.
Christa Theret is every bit as convincing as Alex's more down-to-earth
girlfriend Rachel. Because her character finds it easier to
express herself, she is a far more attractive proposition and we are
more inclined to see things from her point of view. Rachel is the
victim, the one who makes all the sacrifices, and so it must follow
that Alex is the villain. At the outset, Sahr and Libéreau
seem to be doing all they can to alienate the audience from Alex - just
as Dostoyevsky does with his character Raskolnikov - to make the main
protagonist's spiritual rebirth all the more profound and
surprising. The most moving scene is the one in which Alex has to
confront the mother of the young man he accidentally killed (played
with immense sensitivity by Isabelle Candelier). This is the
point at which we know for certain that Alex has a soul and cannot
escape atoning for his crime. The film then follows a fairly
predictable course towards its conclusion, but fortunately both Sahr
and Libéreau have a few tricks still up their sleeves and the
ending, when it comes, delivers one almighty punch. Let's hope we
don't have to wait another ten years for Christophe Sahr's next film
- this is something special.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
Alex is 25, lives with his girlfriend Rachel on a housing estate and
has a two-year-old daughter. The couple both work in a nearby
supermarket, but even with their combined income it is a struggle to
make ends meet, particularly as Alex fritters away most of his money on
his hobby, souping up his Honda Civic. Alex is a speed
junky. He is only happy when he has his foot on the accelerator
and burns rubber on the deserted highways after dark. It helps to
kill the time. But, one fateful night, he kills something else -
a young man who suddenly appears on the road in front of him. His
first reaction is to forget the incident. There were no
witnesses. All he has to do is to forget about it. But that
is the one thing he cannot do...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.