Showing posts with label Veerle Baetens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Veerle Baetens. Show all posts

Friday, October 26, 2018

Duelles





Director Oliver Masset-Depasse with actress/wife Anne Coesens






DUELLES                              B-                   
aka:  Mother’s Instinct
Belgium  France  (97 mi)  2018  d:  Oliver Masset-Depasse              Production web site

Not to be confused with the Rivette film by the same name, only singular instead of plural, this is what they used to call a woman’s picture, as one can imagine housewives addled with diet pills (amphetamines) in the 50’s and 60’s spending their afternoons gathered around the television glued to hysterically overdramatic soap operas like this one.  This heavily stylized film is all bluster and no bite, as it’s not really a commentary on a certain time or era, but instead relishes in recreating that lavish Sirkian look of close-ups and color palettes, heavy on artificiality and plot twists, using misdirection maneuvers to throw the audience off course, but delivers on providing a chilling atmosphere of paranoia and dread, though it’s pure entertainment and not social commentary.  Set in the early 60’s, inspired by a novel by Belgian writer Barbara Abel, but rearranged for the screen by the director and co-writers Giordano Gederlini and François Verjans, starring two remarkable Belgian actresses, next door neighbors Alice, Veerle Baetens from Felix Van Groeningen’s The Broken Circle Breakdown (2012), and Céline (Anne Coesens, wife of the director), best friends in the world, each with near identical husbands, Simon (Mehdi Nebbou) and Damien (Arieh Worthalter), and matching 8-year old sons, Theo (Jules Lefebvres) and Maxime (Luan Adam), who dig a hole between the backyard hedge that divides them for better access, living in perfect harmony with identical adjoining houses in the well-manicured suburbs of Brussels.  Creating a picture of unease right off the bat, using the swirling orchestral music of Renaud Mayeur and Frédéric Vercheval rising to hysterical heights, Alice can be seen spying out the window on her neighbor one morning, waiting until she leaves before rushing over and unlocking the front door with her own key, all looking very suspicious.  But when Céline returns, immediately noticing the curtains have been drawn, she opens them to a surprise birthday celebration in her honor, all arranged by Alice, of course, with viewers offering a smile, as they’ve been duped.  We quickly learn how close these two families are, yet the exaggerated artificiality on display is stunning, accentuating a kind of empty bourgeois extravagance, hair always in place, always dressed for a cocktail party, with obligatory drinks all around, basically ignoring the children, where the happiness feels forced and manipulated.  We get a glimpse of their respective personalities, as Alice is sensuously anxious, openly unsure of herself and filled with self-doubt, where you can read her mood on her face, while Céline is the picture of calm reserve, much more detached and orderly, rarely displaying even an ounce of emotion.

This is an era where success is defined by financial gain in a largely consumer-oriented society, where each suburban house is an audacious display of luxury and wealth, all supposedly contributing to the image of a perfect life.  What this film does is dissect that happiness, little by little, putting a strain on the marriages and friendships, adding personal conflict and tragedy, shattering that illusion, perhaps best represented by Richard Yates’ excruciatingly personal 1961 novel Revolutionary Road (made into a 2008 film by Sam Mendes) depicting a shattered portrait of the idealized 50’s male-centric marriage, one that disintegrates into marital dysfunction as it denies aspirations for women.  But this film inverts the message of that book, putting the women front and center, where they are the stars of the show, with their lives intensely scrutinized, representing the psychological breakdown of that perfect life, while the audience sits back and watches them melt and disintegrate when things start to go wrong, becoming macabre and grotesque, something they had not anticipated and were not prepared for.  The director toys with the idea of evil lurking in our midst, striking when we least expect it, catching us unawares, potentially destroying our lives, allowing for a brief recovery period before another assault begins.  It has all the trappings of a typical horror film, where the gentile politeness of the bourgeois class actually works against them, as they’ve been systematically trained not to question the status quo, but to conform to established norms, living that illusion of happiness, leaving them open and exposed, where reality can creep in.  The music, the garish look of the film, and the performances are all over-the-top, screaming artificiality, while the overly spoiled nature of one of the kids, Theo, is near diabolical at times, intruding into the more restrained adult world like a sledgehammer.  The overly stylish execution may look great, but the film feels slight, and might have actually worked better as a comedy, and may have a future as a camp classic because it eventually turns sinister, storming off the rails with aplomb, probably more Chabrol than Hitchcock, becoming a picture of morbidly acquired taste, as it’s probably not for everyone.     

Things go wrong when Alice, from her backyard, sees Maxime stepping out of the 2nd floor windowsill of his home trying to reach something stuck in the gutter, seemingly unattended, screaming at him to stay still and don’t go any farther, rushing up the stairs to grab him, but it’s too late, as he accidentally falls to his death.   This event alters the family dynamic forever, as it’s a permanent stain in their relationship, with Céline giving the cold shoulder to Alice afterwards, shutting her out, ignoring her, leaving Alice feeling terribly guilty afterwards.  When she talks to her husband about it, he thinks she’s overreacting, that Céline is mourning the loss of her son and needs some time.  At the funeral however, Theo goes berserk when one of his stuffed animals is placed into Maxime’s casket and has a fit when he can’t take it back.  Unable to be consoled, they quickly exit the church to plenty of stares of disbelief.  Afterwards, Céline hands him back the animal along with all of Maxime’s toys, where his eyes light up like its Christmas.  Alice tries to talk with Céline to make amends, but she denies there was ever a problem, yet quickly regains her trust, though it still lingers in the back of her mind.  In no time, Alice suspects Céline of luring Theo out that same window as well, reliving that same moment all over again with her own son, screaming helplessly, but this time Céline is standing right in back of him, easily pulling him back to safety.  But this act infuriates Alice, knowing this was intentionally staged, using her son as a willing pawn.  Again her husband sees little to worry about as Theo is fine, but Alice grows increasingly suspicious afterwards, consumed with rage, reaching an absurd level of paranoia, even as Céline denies any malicious intent.  The film turns on whether or not Alice is imagining things, as she only grows more desperately unhappy and depressed, with her husband starting to worry about her deteriorating mental state.  Things only escalate, however, turning into a staged fright fest of Alice’s hysteric mood swings.  But it’s the director who has the last laugh, skillfully manipulating the audience into believing all is well, that peace has prevailed, before the fireworks begin again, this time far more extreme than anything we could possibly have imagined.  While it’s an edgy, overly stylized puzzle piece, the ghastly turn of events leave no one satisfied in the end. 

Thursday, February 23, 2017

The Ardennes (D’Ardennen)












THE ARDENNES (D’Ardennen)            B-             
Belgium  (96 mi)  2015  ‘Scope  d:  Robin Pront                   Official Facebook 

A tone poem of malice and wounded masculinity, reminiscent of several iconic neo noir thrillers, recalling the Coen brothers’ Blood Simple (1984) and Fargo (1996), David Michôd’s Animal Kingdom (2010), Justin Kurzel’s Snowtown (2011), and Michaël R. Roskam’s 2012 Top Ten Films of the Year: #6 Bullhead (Rundskop) , yet instead of demonstrating that kind of dazzling cinematic flair, first time director Pront has created a style over substance film, where he seems to love to rub our noses in the mud and murk of Antwerp, filling the screen with typical low-life characters no one gives a whit about.  And therein lies the problem, as we’ve seen this sort of film before, elevated to much greater heights than achieved here, yet because of our familiarity of the genre, we kind of like what it’s trying to do, but it just never gets there.  While BULLHEAD director Michaël R. Roskam was initially on tap to direct the film, instead he ended up as an associate producer, BULLHEAD star Matthias Schoenaerts was initially chosen to star, but dropped out when one of the co-writers was given the go ahead to direct his first film, where these choices make a sizeable difference.  The other co-writer is one of the leads in the film, where they both may be too closely stuck to the material, unable to offer improvements, which eventually undermines the film.  While it has a hyper-masculine, super aggressive style, the story itself is fairly generic and overly fatalistic, where it’s all gloom and doom from the outset, opening with an adrenal surge of a man in a mask crashing into a pool of water, making his way to the getaway car, informing the driver, “Just drive.  There was nothing I could do.”  While we immediately think he may have left a dead partner behind, subsequent courtroom sequences reveal his brother Kenny (Kevin Janssens) has taken the rap for a bunged burglary, sentenced to seven years in prison.  Dave (co-writer Jeroen Perceval) managed to get away scot free, taking advantage of his brother’s absence by moving in on his girlfriend Sylvie, Veerle Baetens from The Broken Circle Breakdown (2012), aka the driver.  Not only that, both have gotten sober in the interim, straightened out their lives, and are trying to lead respectable lives.  All that changes when Kenny gets out after four years.  

The brothers are polar opposites personality-wise, as Kenny is a high-strung hot-head with a hair-trigger temper, the enforcer, afraid of no one, while Dave is more reserved and inwardly introspective, the more deliberately thoughtful of the two, most likely the planner of their earlier crimes.  While Dave lives separately with Sylvie, he’s never gotten the nerve to tell his brother about their relationship, forced to keep it secret, which eats at him every day, even as he has sworn to his mother that he would look after his little brother.  Sylvie on the other hand fends off Kenny’s initial advances, reminding him things have changed, even though she works as a waitress in a risqué strip club for Moroccan owner Khalid (Rachid El Ghazaoui).  This announcement shows signs of racial contempt, as the alpha-male Kenny still sees Khalid as a punk kid unworthy to hold an outranking position, though obviously jealous he maintains any kind of existing relationship with his former girl.  As the boys rehash old times under their mother’s roof (Viviane de Muynck), an all-too-familiar reminder of Jackie Weaver in Animal Kingdom, Kenny is already exhibiting out of control and abusive behavior, but the more mild-mannered brother seems to think he still has influence, though he is constantly ignored as Kenny simply violates all rules of conduct, getting in all manner of mischief, including a well-choreographed fight scene inside an activated car wash that gets them both fired from the job, a reminder of what a destructive force his brother really is.  Dave has to invent a lie, creating a girlfriend that doesn’t exist, which greenlights Kenny’s desires to go after Sylvie, even after she decisively shuts him down and refuses to answer his phone calls, where building tension comes to a head when he visits her on the job, getting a little too close for comfort while dissing Khalid, ridiculing him in front of his patrons while drinking too much, getting high on drugs, being out of control and just generally running amok.  When he breaks into one of Sylvie’s recovery meetings, just generally being an abusive ass, all bets are off, as the story only spirals downward from there.  

When Kenny meets Dave in an underground garage with a dead body in the trunk, both are pulled into an amoral morass that leads only to hellish consequences, like an involuntary journey into Dante’s Inferno, as there’s only one place to dispose of bodies, apparently, and that’s the Ardennes, a rugged terrain of dense forests and hidden rivers, a popular locale for hunters, so it’s an interesting intersection of natural beauty and guns, while also a place the two brothers fondly remember visiting as kids, perhaps one of the few happy memories they both share.  But this is a distinctly different occasion, where the force of Kenny’s criminal acts has pulled his brother into the same toxic wasteland, where they sit around in a bar waiting to meet with Stef.  Of course, it’s never as easy as that, as they’re only being sized up by a zealously closed-minded community that instantly recognizes strangers in their midst and has an inherent mistrust.  When someone other than Stef arrives, a giant hulk of a man dressed as a woman, named Joyce (Sam Louwyck), the atmosphere immediately turns creepy beyond description, like a turn into a dark alley with no way out.   Both brothers are out of their element and out of their league, as Stef, Jan Bijvoet from Borgman (2013) and as the European intruder into the Amazonian forest in 2015 Top Ten List #8 Embrace of the Serpent (El abrazo de la serpiente) , seen earlier in the film as Kenny’s cellmate in prison, turns out to be a barbaric psychopathic who, by contrast, makes Kenny look like a boy scout.  Crudely disposing of body parts for sport, his particular specialty is played for laughs, as he has such a good time doing it, yet he maintains a folksy, down home style, exhibiting little to no emotion, but his beady little eyes seem demonic, capable of just about anything.  His über masculinity maintains control through utter calm, though the hatefully misogynistic dialogue coming out of his mouth permeates danger, where the tension rises accordingly.  Of course, nothing goes as planned, but instead falls off the rails, turning into an apocalyptic vision of hell on earth, as if Pandora’s Box has been opened and all the demons unleashed.  It’s a bit preposterous, unintentionally humorous in its hubris, and indescribably contrived, designed to raise eyebrows, yet exists in a hollow universe of emptiness, where there’s little character development, no attachment to any of the less than appealing characters, so let them have at it.  At the end of the day, none of it means anything, but it’s viciously conceived, most of it in dimly lit space, with an element of testosterone eye candy.