  |
|
#6:
The Body Says No
Adam Nayman on The Intruder
A writer for Sight
and Sound once observed, quite correctly,
that Claire Denis “is good with bodies.”
She was writing in regard to Beau travail
(1999) and its creeping full-body pans of
its shirtless Legionnaire protagonists,
but Denis’s subsequent films provide equally
fertile grounds for appreciation. Recall
the slender neck and bobbing, good-enough-to-eat
calves of the Parisian hotel maid catching
Yankee carnivore Vincent Gallo’s gaze in
Trouble Every Day (2001) or the brief
but indelible profile of Valérie Lemercier
bathing on her last night as a single girl
in Friday Night (2003).
Denis is more than a canny sensualist, of
course: Beau travail’s beefcake indulgences
are deployed in the service of a provocative
colonialist critique that questions exactly
why these crew-cut French boys are sweating
it out in the hot sun of a country that
does not require their services. It’s a
theme carried over from her 1988 debut Chocolat,
a melting colonialist memoir. Trouble
Every Day and Friday Night are
less overtly politicized, but overall, Denis’s
films are as much about geographical boundaries
as physical ones: her early masterpiece
I Can’t Sleep (1994) explored the
difficulties of assimilation in the cosmopolitan
metropolis of Paris, while the title of
the TV movie U.S. Go Home (1994)
is fairly succinct in its implications.
The Intruder, which has been routinely
described as impenetrable (including by
myself after my first viewing) in the year
and a half since premiering on the film
festival circuit in 2004 is best analyzed
in light of its creators’ twin preoccupations.
It’s a movie about Louis, an aged soldier
of fortune (Michel Subor, resplendently
craggy) whose body appears to be breaking
down. He brokers himself an under-the-table
heart transplant and then tries, at great
expense, to reconnect with his estranged
son, who may or may not be in Tahiti.
That’s a thumbnail sketch of the film’s
objective chronology. Although truthfully,
this description is akin to saying that
Mulholland Drive is a film about
an actress who has her sometime lover murdered
and feels really, really bad about it. Like
Mulholland Drive, The Intruder
obliterates the literal-figurative binary:
the real and unreal co-exist at a single
level of narrative reality. One example:
Louis lives, with several beautiful dogs,
in a cabin in the woods on the French Swiss
border. He is subject to occasional attacks
by masked intruders, whom he fends off in
brutal style. As far as I can tell, this
is literally happening, but these anonymous
interlopers with their popping guns and
furtive, swarming movements also seem representative
of Louis’s encroaching heart condition.
When he murders one of them, the act can
be read as an act of internal defiance:
His body is staving off failure.
|
 |
|
The Intruder
represents the apotheosis of Denis’s odd
brand of naturalism. Beau travail
and Trouble Every Day were attempts
to convey interior struggle through external
observation, but The Intruder is
almost hysterically ambitious; the lead
character remains totally unknowable except
via external observation. Subor’s performance
doesn’t give us much—his features are impacted,
and what little dialogue he has is spoken
tersely. But when we see him making love
with his pharmacist girlfriend, the black
spots on his back line up with the freckles
on her face in a way that seems revelatory—in
a brief, wordless scene of lovemaking, Denis
suggests that they’re a mottled match.
Denis’s script is adapted from an autobiographical
novel by the French philosopher Jean-Louis
Nancy, who wrote about his own heart transplant
as a metaphor for “intrusion”—the new organ
as unwelcome visitor. The Intruder
is about the alienating effects of Louis’s
heart transplant, but it’s also about the
kind of intrusions that appeared in Chocolat,I
Can’t Sleep and Beau travail:
strangers in places where they don’t belong.
Louis’s journey to Tahiti includes a layover
in Korea, where he bonds with a drunken
businessman over the lyrics of an Elvis
Presley song: pop as the great common denominator.
Louis’s feral intensity is out of place
in Korea, but by the time he boards a boat
for the turquoise frontiers of Tahiti, he
might as well be an alien. It’s suggested
that Louis had spent time there as a young
man, and that he is returning, at the end
of his life, in search of personal closure,
but this Paradise doesn’t really want him:
the key image of the film finds Louis carrying
a mattress through shallow ocean waters,
an indelible image of humanity imposing
a need for personal comfort within untenable
environments.
There’s no question that The Intruder
is challenging, and that dissenters come
by their aversions naturally. But Claire
Denis comes by her ellipticism naturally,
too: there’s nothing in The Intruder
that suggests obfuscation. In keeping with
her past work, it’s a movie about the vast
spaces that lies between countries and within
people, rendered as a slowly oscillating
fever dream of conflicting moods: it’s at
once languorous and terrifying, erotic and
impassive, monumentally distanced and yet
finally intimate in a way that is, to my
mind, without recent cinematic precedent.
|
| |
|
|
|