Monthly Archives: March 2016

  • Le Havre

    Aki Kaurismäki (2011)

    I don’t remember The Man Without a Past, Kaurismäki’s best-known film and the only one of his I’ve seen previously, except that I didn’t enjoy it much.  I enjoyed going to Curzon Richmond yesterday but one reason for that, a glass of Prosecco, is why I won’t recall much of Le Havre either:  I must have been asleep for a good quarter of an hour (it’s a short film anyway – 93 minutes).   I didn’t fight to stay awake.  This is the story of a sixty-something man in Le Havre whose beloved wife lies seriously ill in hospital and tells him not to come back and see her for a couple of weeks.  During that time, he forms an attachment to an adolescent African boy – an illegal immigrant who’s trying to make his way across the Channel to join his mother in London.   The elderly man is called Marcel and his wife’s name is Arletty.  Marcel’s surname is Marx.  The key figure among the team of local police and port officials is Monet.  There’s an agreeable dog called Laika (the name of the first dog in space).  Marcel makes a few bob as a shoeshine man.  Jean-Pierre Léaud, always to be remembered as another boy heading towards the sea, has a cameo in the film.   It’s hard for me to see what this assortment of references adds up to – in fact I don’t get Kaurismäki at all.  His absurdist deadpan humour is greatly admired but I find it monotonous.    Marcel’s first shoeshine customer moves off and gets himself killed.  ‘Poor devil’, says Marcel’s sidekick.  ‘Fortunately, he’d already paid’, replies Marcel.  The woman who runs the neighbourhood bakery tells Marcel he doesn’t deserve Arletty.  ‘No one does so it might as well be me’, is his answer.   The immigrant boy Idrissa is looking miserable and Marcel asks if he’s been crying.  Idrissa shakes his head.  Marcel is relieved to hear it:  ‘Just as well:  it won’t help’.  These one-liners are witty but once you’ve heard one you’ve heard them all.  (These three examples are all taken from the film’s trailer, for obvious reasons.)

    The contest in Le Havre – between eccentric, canny local underdogs and humourless, eventually incompetent authority – is reminiscent of some of the power struggles in Ealing comedy even if, in this case, the success of Marcel’s plan to get Idrissa safely on a boat to England depends on Monet changing sides too.  When Arletty insists that Marcel not visit her for a while, she expects to be dead by the time he goes to see her again; when he returns to her room in the hospital, he finds an empty bed and a nurse tells him he can pick up his wife’s belongings later.   It turns out, though, that she’s made an unexpected recovery.  The couple return home; the cherry tree is in bloom; Arletty says she’ll get on making their evening meal (which is what she was doing when she fell ill).  There’s no doubt this is a striking ending – it’s a happy one yet the outcome feels absurd as much as miraculous.  The cast includes André Wilms (Marcel), Kati Outinen (Arletty), Jean-Pierre Darroussin (Monet) and Blondin Miguel (Idrissa).   They’re a fine collection of faces – Kati Outinen is a particularly remarkable presence not just thanks to the strength of her acting but because she looks out of time (like a woman of the 1950s) and sounds out of place (with her Finnish French accent).  I can’t fault any of the actors yet nothing they do does anything for me.  The best thing in the film is the music played over the opening and closing titles – ‘Matelot’, a mid-1960s song by a British band called The Renegades, of whom I’d never heard.   Along with The Renegades and the Prosecco, another nice thing about this visit to the cinema was being given a card by the guy at the box office to watch a free film on Curzon on Demand.  Le Havre opened only yesterday but it’s available immediately to watch at home.  I suppose I could use the voucher to see the parts of the film I was unconscious for but I don’t think I will.

    6 April 2012

  • Lawless

    John Hillcoat (2012)

    Filmnation Entertainment, the studio behind Lawless, is only four years old.  Its website claims that it’s ‘a new kind of film company – global, versatile and full-service; and is a go-to destination for many of the world’s most renowned filmmakers (including Steven Soderbergh, Terrence Malick, Pedro Almodóvar, Jeff Nichols and Sofia Coppola)’.  If Lawless had been made by one of the major league Hollywood players it would be impossible not to see the frequent, showy violence in this otherwise very boring movie as the only thing about it that a big studio might see as a potential money-spinner.  Lawless is adapted by Nick (Bad Seeds) Cave from a 2008 novel by Matt Bondurant called The Wettest Country in the World and perhaps the least surprising thing about Lawless (although the competition is strong) is the loss of the novel’s box-office-poisonous title.  The main characters in the story are Bondurant’s ancestors, three brothers who run a moonshine outfit in Franklin County, Virginia during the Prohibition Era.  Their livelihood is threatened with the arrival of Charlie Rakes, a special agent commissioned by the district attorney to declare war on the local bootleggers.  The Bondurant brothers, played by Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy and Jason Clarke, are all so dull that it’s hard to work out whether they’re meant to be likeable opportunists – but it is clear from Guy Pearce’s uncharacteristic performance as Rakes that this representative of the law is the villain of the piece, not so much a killjoy as a dandified psychopath.   Pearce is a good actor but not here:  with his etiolated face, daft central parting and put-on voice and giggle he’s more like a Batman baddie.

    Hillcoat’s previous film The Road was distinguished by Javier Aguirresarobe’s cinematography and Benoît Delhomme does a similarly fine job of lighting Lawless.  The grading of the colours of the Virginia landscape is lovely; the interiors are very fine too although the effect of prettifying the thugs by delicate illumination of parts of their hats or faces is a bit silly.   Lawless is genuinely illuminated by the presence of Jessica Chastain and Mia Wasikowska, even if watching them doesn’t do much beyond demonstrate that their talent and beauty are wasted here.   The uninteresting men in the cast also include Gary Oldman.  Shia LaBeouf plays Jack, the youngest of the Bondurant brothers; the film begins with his voiceover and a scene in which Jack is being instructed to shoot a pig, which he’s scared of doing.  I suspect this opening what-it-takes-to-be-a-man moment is a microcosm of the whole story of Lawless; it certainly gives you a flavour of what’s to follow in terms of violence.   The dying squeals of the pig were louder and more expressive than the grunts of approval which the man two seats to my left emitted in response to bloody highlights during the next hour.  But I think I was reacting to him as much as the film when I walked out at that point.

    11 September 2012

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