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2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
lacrimae rerum, 27 August 2011
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Author:
oOgiandujaOo from United Kingdom
For this tale Duras takes as inspiration the Book of Ecclesiastes.
Tangential as ever she never directly refers to it, but she does refer
to the "book about the King of the Jews chasing the wind" (note in her
short film Césarée, she never mentions the central figure of Berenice
by name, merely referring to her as the "Queen of the Jews").
Ecclesiastes was a very resonant choice for Duras, having been
introduced to it by a man she loved called Freddie. Never underestimate
the amount of love Duras pours into a film!
Ecclesiastes was written by an individual who identified himself as the
King of Israel, and contains musings and aphorisms regarding the
transitory nature of life and the futility of worldly aspirations.
Qoheleth, as he is known (a title not a name), emphasises that the only
pleasures to be taken in life are fairly immediate ones such as the
satisfaction from hard work, and from eating and drinking. In Les
Enfants, protagonist Ernesto (Axel Bogousslavsky) asks a group of
people to join him in a glass of cider and the peeling of potatoes.
It's in this spirit that Duras gifts a lovely piece of jazz music from
Carlos d'Alessio near the end of the movie.
Ernesto is a seven-year-old boy who has the body of a thirty-year-old
man. He declares, upon attending his first day of school, that he no
longer wishes to attend. The reason? He does not wishes to be taught
things that he does not know. In a sort of educationalist moonlighting,
following in the tradition established by Rousseau, Duras expounds upon
the futility of education and its both Procrustean and coercive nature.
The absence of extras is a peculiar feature of the film, which comes
off as narcissistic. The school playground, when filmed, is entirely
absent of children. Perhaps also the emptiness is symbolic, teaching
has destroyed what a child is. The classroom a hall for brats at a
spectacle, taught the inevitable truth (for Duras) of God's
non-existence. Bright things that chase butterflies, sinning in
innocence, turned into wanton gawpers.
Duras' own rather fruity childhood and later educational path possibly
informs her revolt against state-organised French education. She was
born to a French couple in Indochina, an exotic and harsh place of
expedient living. Her father died when she was four, and she was the
creature of her depressive and occasionally abusive mother. In
adolescence she became the lover of a wealthy Chinese man, as a
response to the family's impoverished situation (these events are
described in Rithy Panh's movie "The Sea Wall", adapted from Duras'
novel). For this she was ostracised at her boarding school in Saigon.
Educationally speaking she took her own path at the Sorbonne, where she
dropped mathematics in favour of politics and then politics in favour
of law. One of Ernesto's messages is that people must only learn to
slake their craving for knowledge. He follows a similar
interdisciplinary shuffle in his explorations into the boundaries of
human knowledge. You don't learn unless you want to, I know people with
degrees, who have learnt to pass the exam, but retained nothing, as if
their lessons were mercury thrown on a glass slope. Such is the
perversity of education.
In an auditorium of perhaps ten people, we had I think four walkouts,
which is a measure of the negativity in some of the statements made.
Ernesto's mother thanks him at one point, not for relieving her
loneliness, but for allowing her to see that it was natural, at another
she mentions that, "Life never interested me". Yet if they had stayed I
think they would have heard some positive notes. Until the end the film
gets progressively darker in terms of the natural light, but in the end
is quite beautiful, and Bruno Nyutten is to be congratulated on his
photography, particularly the tracking shot along the fence and the
lupins and circles. The entire film, although referencing fantastic
events involving characters that occur elsewhere in the world during
the story, is shot in peaceful and leafy Vitry-sur-Seine, Nyutten
certainly grasps its exasperating tranquillity. Congratulations also to
Axel Bogousslavsky and his incredibly expressive eyes, very convincing
in his seven-year-old mannerisms.
Although some suspect that God has disappeared from human thought,
especially in secular France, Duras, via Ernesto was convinced that the
God was a marcescent concept, stifling thinking even in its death. As
long as man thinks of God, Ernesto says, human limits are fixed. The
metaphor of this is when Ernesto's sister and mother sit down and
discuss what to cook, running through a score of recipes that are just
different ways of cooking potato.
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