Showing posts with label Gaspar Noé. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaspar Noé. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

The Age of Innocence


Adam of Club Silencio here with a quick addition to the 2004 countdown. Lucile Hadzihalilovic's haunting and metaphorical mood piece about female adolescence, Innocence, is one of 2004's unsung and eerie treasures from across the pond.

Girls arrive by coffin at a mysterious woodland locale only to be sent away when they reach a certain age. They're taught lessons of nature and dance, but remain unversed in the deeper mysteries that surround them. What lies beyond the confines of the woods, and what are the strange passageways that stretch beneath the forest floor? French auteur Gaspar Noé (husband and stylistic confidant to Hadzihalilovic) supplies his regular cinematographer, Benoît Debie, to create unforgettably sumptuous and evocative imagery to recall the abstract mystery of youth and bubbling sexuality beneath the surface.


Fans of Marion Cotillard, creepy children and atmospheric dread take definite note. Lucile Hadzihalilovic is a female director to watch -- successfully creating resonant themes by wholly ambiguous means. Innocence is like a stroll through the woods, or the peak of one's sexuality: a curious descent into the beautiful, dark unknown.

Monday, October 19, 2009

LFF: Drenched in Death

If you thought Dave'd finally dropped dead from exhaustion, then, quite apart from that being rather insulting (I can last more than a week, thanks), you were wrong. I merely took a weekend breather, but I'm back headlong into the LONDON FILM FESTIVAL for its remaining two weeks. This week's hot tickets include Julianne Moore in Atom Egoyan's Chloe, Michael Haneke's The White Ribbon and one of my most anticipated of the fest, Jacques Audiard's A Prophet. Today's Gala screening was Jane Campion's Bright Star, but since you'll all have heard all about it already, I'll just say that this tender, romantic, fluid and poetic film is one of my favourites of the fest so far, and caught me just at the right moment. But onto darker, twistier, weirder things.

Gaspar Noé's latest, Enter the Void, is as baffling and lucid an experience as his films always are. But unlike the confrontational, violent, disorientating experience of Irreversible - which quite apart from the well-publicized shock moments was deeply immersive - his latest piece leaves less of an impression, despite the amount of time it requires you to sit there. After a heady start, shot in a point-of-view fashion, the character we're seeing things through the eye of dies. Thus we enter a circulating, pensive world after his death, possibly seeing things through his spirit's perspective. What starts as a promising, delirious 'thesis' (in as much as Noé's films can be said to have a discernible 'point') on death as a drug trip, remains a strong aesthetic experience but increasingly fades as any kind of engaging piece of work: moments repeat, the camera circles endlessly, this audience is lost. I like being left musing, even if forever, over a film - but being bored, being disinterested is a different story. Sometimes a filmmaker makes a film have no obvious meaning because he has none to give. C-

Catherine Breillat's take on Bluebeard is as delightfully, drolly morbid as fairy-tales are supposed to be. From the bright, measured camerawork of the early sections to a more claustrophobic, darker and more tantalizing richness as Marie-Catherine (a sharp Lola Créton) marries Bluebeard (Dominique Thomas) and enters his castle, Breillat weaves a coyly amusing, creepily unnerving tale. It's aided, somehow, by the weaving in of two modern sisters reading the story - ostensibly, this adds nothing, but the younger sister especially is so naturally, innocently hilarious that it reflects the autobiographical nostalgia Breillat's fairy-tales always engage in. It feels a little indulgent and inconsequential, but the skimping on character makes it all the more like the short, wicked fairy-tale it came from. B

It's a three-header of British talent (two of whom you might know, the other one you probably won't, or at least I didn't) in The Disappearance of Alice Creed, a twisty thriller that's overloaded with surprises. The film is dominated by violent close-ups (of just about everything) and an overbearingly percussive score, which relegate it to the realm of amateur production even before the plot has borne all its rote surprises, which occasionally do shock but not in a way that proves any more engaging. Gemma Arterton and Eddie Marsan are always nice to see on-screen and Martin Compston adapts well to a bigger role. Though that's the entire cast right there -- all three of them -- the film seems more interested in tossing them around along the plot's bumpy road than crafting any kind of character. D+

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

April Showers: Irreversible

April Showers evenings @ 11 all month long

I like to think that this is the only part of the horrifically vile Irreversible (2002). It's a short film about sweet lovemaking and the marital bliss of one of cinema's sexiest couples, Monica Bellucci & Vincent Cassel. That's it, a beautiful short film!!! I pretend whenever possible that the rest of the movie did not attempt to show itself to me.


Tangent: Shower curtains in movies are always so sparkly clean. No mold, no stains, nothing. You can totally kiss through them without once thinking 'god, i totally need to clean this bathroom!' ...hypothetically speaking. My bathroom is impeccable. Um...

Occasionally my pretending fails me. I recognizable the structural potency (to an extent) of Irréversible but I will never ever ever ever ever subject myself to it again. Never ever.

Weirdly, I have never seen any of the other collaborations between the Bellucci-Cassels (and there's quite a few). Cassel will next be seen in the portugese film Á Deriva (Adrift) and the Andrew Niccol's next project The Cross which stars Orlando Bloom... but I'm most eager to see what David Cronenberg will do with Cassel's closeted self-deluding "Kirill" in the Eastern Promises sequel.

We'll see Bellucci in the ensemble cast of The Private Lives of Pippa Lee this year. After Pippa, she reunites with director Guisseppe Tornatore. He fawned over her beauty in Malena (2000) to such an extent that the film won a cinematography nomination for its DP Lajos Koltai. Koltai isn't joining the Bellucci/Tornatore reunion, though. Enrico Lucidi got the DP duties on Tornatore's latest, Baaria -La Porta del vento. Such a thankless task, pointing cameras at Bellucci ;)


Bellucci and Cassel celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary this year. The knot, still tied. Here they are at the Cesar Awards (France's Oscars) earlier this year. I can't stop looking at pictures of them, today. They're regulars: Vincent has been nominated 4 times, winning once and Bellucci was nominated once for their first film together L'Appartement.



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