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6 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
A makeover of VERTIGO seems a little besides the point. (possible spoiler), 31 March 2000
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Author:
Darragh O' Donoghue (hitch1899_@hotmail.com) from dublin, ireland
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
BAROCCO begins with lizards and slime, and ends with a storm. Techine's
subject may be what's in between, humans in crisis, but these referants
give
the film an almost religious dimension, and also a sense of that
inbetween,
the grey, neither great heights nor depths. Although the drama and
Romance
of the film's music thrillingly recalls Bernard Hermann, and various plot
elements borrow from films such as VERTIGO and NORTH BY NORTHWEST, the
film's calm distance prevents it from ever falling into such Hitchcockian
traps as narrative excitement or humour.
From what I can make out, the film is a political thriller, about how the
murky realm of politics infringes on ordinary people, not in the sense of
laws and taxes, but literally, in terms of life and death. The film is
set
on the eve of an important election, which seems less like an open
democratic contest than an underworld struggle for power. Samson (Gerard
Depardieu), a small-time boxer, is bribed to admit his abuse as a child by
one of the candidates.
Seeing the money as a possibility of escape for himself and his long-time
unemployed fiancee Laure (Isabelle Adjani), he accepts, but under pressure
from the other candidate, who gives him the same amount to keep schtum, he
decides to scarper with Laure to begin a new life. Before they meet at
the
train station, however, Samson is kidnapped by the first set of thugs.
Laure sleeps all night waiting for him - and this is crucial, because the
conventional-enough boxing/gangster melodramatics take a bizarre,
dreamlike
turn.
Suffice it to say, an assassin who is the spitting image of Samson
(probably
because he's also played by Gerard Depardieu) shoots him. This is a bit
confusing for those, like myself, with limited French, but the rest of the
film consists of
the assassin chasing Laure for the money, and then the two planning escape
from the gangsters/politicians/police. The VERTIGO idea of the lead
character being forced to paralysingly watch as a lover is murdered
reaches
its logical conclusion when Samson's burial is intercut, death and
rebirth,
with his assassin remaking himself in the boxer's image, just as Scottie
did
Judy.
So, on one level, the story is a gendered reclamation of VERTIGO. Like
Scottie, Laure seems to have the active power in a plot which is in many
ways about the development of the female character in a male genre. The
film opens with Laure masked, like a terrorist or Muslim, wending through
bleak fog past an accident, and the film in one way reveals this mystery,
removes the misogynistic idea that women are sphinxes to be worked out.
But
her power is eventually as passive as Scottie's; witness the shocking
denouement. There is a very strong possibility, like VERTIGO, that the
film
is a dream - the splitting of her desire is very Bunuel, and the nocturnal
locations, strange plot motivations and stylised movements are very
dreamlike.
The splitting of the male lead, literalising a metaphorical current in
French crime cinema, becomes the determining motif of the mise-en-scene.
The film is renowned for both its style and use of colour, and while the
latter wasn't much in evidence in the dreadful print I saw (the yellow at
the end should GLEAM), the widescreen compositions are highly formalised,
symmetrical, reflecting themselves, suggesting wholes the plot continually
rupture, and the camera movements constantly travelling right or left,
often
against the action, ironically creating a static circularity.
Unfortunately, like much of the film, this style is neither one thing or
the
other - it is too stylised to be realistic, but too timid to be
outlandishly
artificial as a Chabrol.
BAROCCO's analysis of power is similarly muted. France in the 1970s must
have been a grim time, an inverse to 1968; here revolution is threatened
by
the 'management', criminality, corruption. But Techine's analysis rarely
goes beyond ironically showing smiling posters of candidates; suggesting
the
complicity the media; or setting political backroom activity in shrouded
gangster-like milieux. It seems a pity to invoke Genet with theatrical
metaphors and a very public brothel (central here to ideas of family,
commerce, politics) and then not to do much with them.
5 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Unpleasant viewing, 14 July 2008
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Author:
robert-temple-1 from United Kingdom
This is a strange one. Hyped as a 'variation on Hitchcock's Vertigo', it certainly fails to be that. It is odd to see the very young Isabelle Adjani when she still had puppy fat in her face, as she does not look particularly like Isabelle Adjani at all except in the eyes at that age. It was a big mistake to cast Gerard Depardieu in the role of two characters, one a boxer who is murdered and the other the killer who murdered him for money. When the boxer's girl friend Adjani shows no sign of recognition of Depardieu the killer when they meet, we know the film is hopelessly contrived, because anybody can see that it is Depardieu. This is really stretching things too far. The film is gloomy, washed-out, laden with hopelessness, a bleak vision. Andre Techine the director shows some directorial skill, so that the film is not what one would call 'badly made'. It is instead badly conceived and a failure. Also, it is rather affected to try to achieve some kind of mock-profundity by a 'study' of a girl who wants to get together with the killer of her boy friend. If this is meant to have some deep existential meaning, it flops. The profundity can be measured in millimetres.
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
The movie which put Téchiné on the map....., 15 June 2006
Author:
dbdumonteil
....and perhaps his best.This one has qualities and a sense of mystery
,an atmosphere and good acting.
Gérard Depardieu plays two parts and when people learned he played
opposite Isabelle Adjani ,they named them " couple of the year" .Let's
not forget an excellent support from Marie -France Pisier as a
prostitute and Jean-Claude Brialy . The story takes place in Amsterdam
and Téchiné made the best of his opportunities: classy thespians and a
legendary harbor.
The plot is far-fetched ,but the use of the railway station is
entrancing.Trains have a magic cars ,boats and planes do not possess.
8 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
An ambiguous, confused and relentlessly gloomy thriller, 16 June 2000
Author:
jameswtravers
Whilst this film does occasionally impress in a few scenes, it is
overwhelmingly a major disappointment. The plot is faintly ridiculous,
although it might just have been possible, given the right mood and the
right actors, to convince the audience that a woman can fall for the
murderer of her boyfriend. The trouble is that the film does not seem to
have either the right mood or the right actors, and the end result is
rather
like an unconvincing melee of film noire out-takes.
The acting is noticeably below par throughout, particularly from the lead
characters Adjani and Depardieu - all the more surprising that both are
now
recognised as actors of no mean standing in France. The chemistry between
the two lead characters just doesn't feel right, and it looks as if
Téchiné
made a great error of judgement to cast Depardieu in the role of both
Samson
and his killer. Certainly, Depardieu makes little effort to differentiate
the two characters except by wearing a wig and, as a result, the
underlying
premise of the plot is lost completely.
However, it is the general mood of the film that is the most irritating
aspect of this film. It is just so relentlessly grim and dark that it
seems
to stifle the plot and imbue the moments of great tension with an air of
third-rate melodrama.
It is difficult to believe that, with such a wealth of talent on both
sides
of the camera, such a film could have failed so badly to hit its
mark.
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