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Get Out of Here
By Jeff Reichert
À tout de suite
dir: Benoit Jacquot, France, Cinema Guild
Criticizing a
film or filmmaker (especially of the auteurist
bent) for committing crimes of fashion or perceived
insularity from the world at large may be the
analytical equivalent to fishing with cyanide
bombs. Fair or no, it’s always easy to call out
a movie if you think it’s hedging on politics,
and right or no, you can almost always score some
easy points with readers. In truth, the film that
deals artfully and directly with contemporary
political realities is certainly a rarity, and
we inarguably need more, which leaves the critics
with a quandary: In which cases is it appropriate
to pull out the trump card, and in which do you
give a film a free pass just because it’s great?
I can recognize that Lucrecia Martel’s The
Holy Girl is an intensely personal, beautifully
crafted film but simultaneously question whether
its existence is more essential than say, John
Boorman’s less aesthetically accomplished, but
thoroughly engaged In My Country. In the
mind of the cinephile, three packed screens of
Argentinean ennui at the local multiplex would
be a place beyond paradise, but does the world
really need more of the former, or do we movie
lovers just dream that it does? Simultaneously,
I could look at Gus Van Sant’s utter lack of commitment
to the hot button issues at the core of his Elephant,
perhaps the sine qua non in recent cinema of gorgeous
vacuity and argue that something like Hotel
Rwanda, for all its clichéd disaster-movie
hysterics, is ultimately a more vital, if less
personal statement. But then, trying to predict
what the world needs more of is a pastime better
left to ideologues. For all our ingrained biases
and personal convictions, I suppose oftentimes
a critic’s reaction to a film may be based on
little more than a matter of what you’re looking
for at that moment when the projector lamp clicks
on.
When I settled in for Benoît Jacquot’s À tout
de suite the last thing I was hoping for was
the lazy, half-conceived “homage” to the French
New Wave wrapped in a black-and-white “Girls Gone
Wild” narrative I got rooked out of $10.50 for.
Jacquot’s latest is pretty standard l’amour
fou fare—Lili’s (Isild Le Besco) a pouty,
rich white art student, who falls for Baba (Ouassini
Embarek) handsome Moroccan “real estate” dealer/self-appointed
Robin Hood who turns out to be the criminal his
black suit/black tie ensemble and nightclub haunts
suggests. Seemingly only days after their initial
liaison, Baba and a pair of accomplices rob a
bank, killing a cashier in the process (predictably,
the narrative skimps on whether or not Baba pulled
the trigger, preferring to wallow instead in his
more generalized guilt—they’re all killers).
Lili agrees to hide the thieves in her family’s
large, mazelike Parisian apartment, but it’s not
long before they’re on a trip that takes them
through France, into Spain, Morocco and then Greece;
a whirlwind tour that starts off like vacation
(at least according to Lili’s wistful voiceover)—flush
with cash from the robbery, the group binges on
clothing, fancy hotels, rental cars and sex—but
turns ugly as their money becomes more difficult
to launder. The holiday ends after Lili is stopped
by customs in Greece and questioned, forcing her
makeshift gang to desert her at the airport. Adrift,
without money or knowledge of the language, she
has a brush with white slavery, finds a job in
a tacky tourist shop, engages in a lesbian affair,
hits up a threesome, and finishes by calling daddy
who brings her home to Paris to face trial (a
two year conviction commuted to five years probation
after a Presidential pardon). This last, most
compressed (sadly, as it might have been the most
interesting otherwise) section of the narrative
doesn’t fall too far from the through-line of
The Real World: Cancun except, given that
it’s based on Elisabeth Fanger’s memoir When
I Was 19, the proceedings maintain some tenuous
link to a reality that Cancun willfully
flouts.
Though Lili may sound a bit like the French Patty
Hearst, her gang is no SLA, and director Jacquot
steadfastly refuses any investigation of the racial
or political implications of his tale, fully wasting
an opportunity to truly nod to the legacy of the
New Wave. Godard made mincemeat of similar material
and turned it into the bursting-at-the-seams Pierrot
le fou; Jacquot seems too concerned with finding
the right medium close-up to show awareness of
any of the realities beyond his narrow frame,
somehow managing the neat trick of making a relative
lightweight like Truffaut look like Chairman Mao
in comparison. Cyanide bomb alert: Lili’s infatuation
with an Arab in a film that’s allegedly set in
a period that saw the end of France’s controversial
colonial relationship with Algeria needs to do
more to acknowledge these chacracters’ mutual
fascination with the other and not drop the ball
on a major opening into an exploration of the
political realities of the time. Fumble it he
does however, leaving his heroine to draw a crude
sketch of an almond-eyed, haughty cheek-boned
space alien, which she plasters above her bed
and proceeds to moon over. “But it’s just a story,”
someone argues. Well, perhaps, and though I’m
not suggesting that chatter about race needs to
be on the tip of everyone’s tongues as in Paul
Haggis’s Crash, you’d think someone like
Jacquot, who lived through the time, might want
to bring some of that experience to the fore instead
of stepping back and letting his Let’s Go Europe!
travelogue unspool without incident.
I suppose if choosing to eschew color shooting
in this day and age is a political choice (and
it may very well be, albeit a weak one) we might
have to give Jacquot some credit, but is this
the only marker he recognizes of Sixties French
cinema? Jacquot ignores the cardinal rule of the
nostalgia trip that a film like Bertolucci’s The
Dreamers (which seems more the frothy trifle
on the surface) got right—recognize the qualities
that made what you’re paying homage to special,
and do it a little bit of justice. Though his
photography is often attractive, his camera seems
chained to interiors, and when the film does move
outside he supplies us with grainy stock footage
from the time—obviously a cost-cutting maneuver
more than a true aesthetic decision. And his score,
which is obviously meant to evoke the low-key
policier menace of a “Dragnet” or contemporaneous
thriller, it sounds more like the descent into
the dungeon of King Koopa’s castle. The whole
enterprise only retains some relationship to the
New Wave through the mention of the same that
critics must be copping from the press notes for
politically and aesthetically, Jacquot misses
the mark completely.
Though 20-year old Isilde Le Besco dominates every
frame, she’s lucky that Jacquot’s antics keep
some of the weight of the film from her shoulders.
For the record, she’s a fine, fleshy ingénue in
the curiously-attractive Ludivine Sagnier mold
who shines at times, and even comported herself
admirably through the course of Jacquot’s similarly
milquetoast Sade. (She desperately needs
a run-in with an Assayas or Noé to harness her
ample talents, though teaming up with Christophe
Ali and Nicolas Bonilauri who directed the truly
bizarre Le Rat could prove intriguing.)
While Le Besco is intermittently compelling, throughout
À tout de suite, I kept asking myself:
Does the director have any perspective on all
of this? And who is this all supposed to please?
Unless the youth of today are farther gone than
I think (entirely possible) it’s certainly not
going to quicken the pulse of the kind of twentysomethings
who would have hung around the Cinémathèque Française,
so perhaps Jacquot’s low blood pressure take on
the material is meant to appease those who would
look back on the Seventies with nostalgia. Either
way, it’s worthless. But then, should I have expected
anything less from France’s answer to Michael
Winterbottom? Perhaps—Winterbottom came along
and surprised me with the urgency of In This
World, and the forthcoming 9 Songs
sounds like an interesting step for a restless,
growing-towards-unclassifiable filmmaker. Watching
the movement of someone like Winterbottom into
some shred of relevance leaves me to wonder why
we’re watching Benoît Jacquot at all. Apologists
might question my vitriol for a film so modest
in intent, but it’s precisely this lack of ambition
that makes À tout de suite so abhorrent.
It’ll be taken all too seriously by some, thus
drawing attention from more worthy films, and
will allow the auteurist naysayers one more “I
told you so”— for here we have yet another silly,
useless film that wouldn’t even be worth half
a nod if it came without subtitles. |