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Director Lukas Dhont |
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Lukas with executive producer brother Michiel |
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The director on the set with Émilie Dequenne |
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Dhont directing a scene |
CLOSE B Belgium Netherlands France (104 mi) 2022 d: Lukas Dhont
I was looking for a sense of hopefulness, that we can take that armor off and allow people to see the parts that are broken. —Lukas Dhont, Lukas Dhont on making sense of tragedy in Close
An unqualified tearjerker that lingers long afterwards, this is a coming-of-age story of a child friendship gone wrong, and innocence broken, resulting in a full-blown tragedy. Premiering at Cannes where it shared the Grand Prix (2nd Place) with the most recent Claire Denis film, Stars at Noon (2022), it is reminiscent of an earlier Icelandic film that played on similar themes, Guðmundur Arnar Guðmundsson’s Heartstone (Hjartasteinn) (2016), a gay love story that also went terribly wrong, though some may be perplexed by a continuing trend that any depiction of a gay character always has to end in tragedy. Dhont is an openly gay Belgian filmmaker whose previous film Girl (2018) is a provocative piece surrounding the gender dysphoria of a transgender ballerina, while this film explores even younger kids who are best friends, seemingly living carefree lives during the long summer months, idly spending their days playing together, using their imaginations to invent fantasy scenarios, comfortable enough to have regular sleepovers, where each is integrated into the other’s family, without a thought in the world about anyone else. This is the world of pre-adolescence, as Léo (Eden Dambrine) and Rémi (Gustav De Waele) are two 13-year olds with an unbreakable bond, where there are no limits on their friendship, including an open display of affection, often sleeping next to one another in the same bed, where they are not in the least bit self-conscious, helped along by the performances of two gifted actors who bring their own personalities into the room. There is nothing to be read into this, with the director offering no indication of any sexual orientation, as neither one views it as anything out of the ordinary, with their respective families feeling the same way. Dhont apparently met young Eden Dambrine on a train ride, ultimately offering him an audition after watching his facial expressions from a few seats away, where those expressions offer a cinematic window into his soul. Léo’s family runs a rural flower farm, where his mother, Léa Drucker, from Xavier Legrand’s 2017 Top Ten List #7 Custody (Jusqu'à la garde), father (Marc Weiss), and older brother Charlie (Igor van Dessel) do most of the hard labor, spending their time cultivating the soil and harvesting the flowers, getting their hands dirty, with Léo escaping from that harsh reality, mostly avoiding work altogether as the two kids run wild through an Edenesque rural countryside (Dhont grew up close to a flower farm in the Flemish countryside), while Rémi’s mother Sophie, Émilie Dequenne, best known for her starring role in the Dardenne bother’s ROSETTA (1999), is as affectionate with Léo as her own son Rémi, describing him as “my heart’s son,” treating him like a member of the family. Interestingly, the mothers of both boys remain their best friends, viewing them simply as they are, not how they want them to be. Being a Belgian filmmaker, the near flawless execution most closely resembles the stylistic social realism of the Dardennes brothers, notable for having won two prestigious Palme d’Or awards at Cannes for ROSETTA (1999) and L’ENFANT (2005), giving this film a cinéma vérité documentary style where the narrative is advanced by the physical actions of the protagonists, with the camera having a love affair with their faces, following their every move, making them the centerpiece of the film, where visual compositions and wordless moments are accentuated to express underlying emotions that are too difficult to rise to the surface, allowing viewers to assess the meaning.
As he was writing the film, Dhont found a source of inspiration in NYU developmental psychology professor Niobe Way’s 2011 book Deep Secrets: Boys’ Friendships and the Crisis of Connection, drawn from hundreds of interviews with adolescent boys of various backgrounds (Ask an Academic: The Secrets of Boys), discovering boys are often distraught about losing the closeness of earlier friendships, where the rates of suicide among boys in the hyper-masculine culture of the United States jumps to four times the rate of girls. Changes in late adolescence occur because cultural pressures to become “a man” are intensified, buying into the notion that they need to suppress their emotional side to avoid being perceived as gay or effeminate, as effeminate traits become a subject of mockery, ultimately led to believe romantic relationships take precedence over friendships. As with their earlier film, this was written jointly by Dhont and theater director Angelo Tijssens, shot by Frank van den Eeden, beautifully capturing the rhythms, sequencing, and exquisite framing, where tracking shots are particularly effective, with another delicate score by composer Valentin Hadjadj, while the director’s younger brother Michiel is an executive producer. The film mirrors the darker overtones of Céline Sciamma’s Petite Maman (2021), particularly the duality of the friendship, while also echoing the languid summer moments from Tomboy (2011), a rhythm of motion film where something is lurking just beneath the surface. Inspired by his own childhood and teenage friendships, where gay kids and teenagers are unsure of their own sexuality, some viewers may be completely unaware of any LGBTQ implications and may simply view this as melancholic territory, yet the film will likely play differently to gay viewers, as they more easily recognize themselves being treated as outsiders, while the film has a way of connecting to desire, to identity, though it is subtle enough that it may not make any difference, as the question of whether there is a romantic context plays only a subordinate role. Nonetheless, when the kids return to school, they are happily placed in the same class, yet social pressures cause a strange turn, as their closeness is suddenly placed under a microscope, creating something of a stir, where a girl quizzically blurts out, “Could I ask you something? Are you together? Are you a couple” This seemingly innocuous question changes the entire trajectory of the film, as intimacy is immediately sexualized, with Léo quickly growing defensive and dismissing the notion, while Rémi stays quiet. In another random incident, someone can be heard calling Léo a “faggot,” or asking if he’s on his “period,” homophobic slurs causing alarm signals to go off in his head, suddenly aware of how others perceive him. Questions of toxic masculinity suddenly flood the screen, creating a fissure in their relationship, with Léo seeking other interests, developing a friendship with Baptiste (Léon Bataille), who encourages him to join the hockey team, something he never shares with Rémi, hanging out with a different group of friends, where all they talk about is football and sports, while eying his friend from afar. Their routine habits are significantly altered, no longer bicycling home or hanging out so much, and when they do, it quickly grows uncomfortable, getting into shoving matches, though neither can put into words what they’re feeling, so instead they remain edgy and standoffish, where that dreamlike summer idyll becomes a distant memory. Hockey becomes a symbol for masculinity, which Léo does not take to naturally, as it becomes a struggle, but he persistently keeps working at it.
Approaching a subject that would have been taboo in previous generations, the filmmaker is interested in exploring the pitfalls of male relationships in early adolescence, where the world around them can help shape who they become, for better or for worse. Even with loving families around them, the trajectory of each boy is decisively different, as Léo tends to suppress and deny the bonds of friendship, calculating a socially acceptable future that conforms with the conventions of the mainstream, while Rémi takes a different path, finding it more difficult to just pretend that friendship doesn’t exist. Léo is like a brother to him, welcomed into his family, where spending time together feels natural. To suddenly be rejected for seemingly no reason really stings, yet the focus of attention remains on Léo, who’s in nearly every frame of this film, so viewers can only imagine what Rémi is going through, as the director chooses not to share it. Rémi may have a more sensitive side, as he plays the oboe in a local orchestra, allowing Léo to watch him while he practices, while his room is painted red, a striking color tone with suggestions of sensuality, as Dhont accentuates color in this film, where the fields of flowers are especially vibrant, but this is mere symbolism. His mother seems overly sensitive as well, working as a nurse in a maternity ward, as she is genuinely loving and affectionate, playfully seen joining the kids having fun during the summer, where there are really no discernible differences between them, as there are no built-in walls, instead she expresses a feeling of acceptance, remaining completely in the dark about the changing dynamics between the teenagers. But the direction of the film centers around the way the socially conditioned aspect of Léo’s life changes, impulsively distancing himself from Rémi, hanging around other boys, spending more time at home, suddenly taking more interest in helping the family harvest the flowers, where no questions are really asked. In many ways this resembles the same dynamic of the two longtime friends in Martin McDonagh’s The Banshees of Inisherin (2022), where one simply moves in a different direction without telling the other, causing internalized emotional frictions that only lead to tragedy, as the cruelty of the world intervenes. While the same thing happens here, the violence is substantially different, as these are just kids, yet that aspect makes the ultimate tragedy even that much more impactful, yet what’s most heartbreaking is how it’s become normalized. Although this film has received universal acclaim, it is not without its own problems, as the outcome feels overly predictable, where the structure is designed to prolong any emotional reaction for as long as possible, so it is delayed, and delayed, feeling overly manipulative, continually tugging at the heartstrings. That’s not to say there isn’t a sense of restraint, as there is, especially in the developing tenderness between Léo and his older brother Charlie, who serves as a substitute for Rémi, but this is a slow burn into an emotional abyss that we see coming, yet the impact is still devastating. To the filmmaker’s credit, the streamlined execution of the narrative style sets the stage for the ultimate finale, using a less is more formula to all but guarantee there won’t be a dry eye in the house afterwards, feeling more than a little cathartic.