Yapım :2005 Ülke : Belçika Fransa Tür : Drama Süre : 95 dakika IMDB Puan : 7.5/10 IMDB ID: tt0456396
A.K.A The Child
Oyuncular Jérémie Renier - Bruno Déborah François - Sonia Jérémie Segard - Steve Fabrizio Rongione - Le jeune bandit Olivier Gourmet - Le policier en civil Mireille Bailly - La mère de Bruno Jean-Michel Balthazar - Le barman Stéphane Bissot - La receleuse Frédéric Bodson - Le bandit plus âgé Olindo Bolzan - Le commerçant bis
Bilgi :Having released four masterpieces consecutively, a feat that few filmmakers in the history of cinema could claim to match, Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne have a great deal to teach moviemakers and audiences alike. Their latest, L'Enfant, is a perfect example of their strengths, not just in its craft, but in its profoundly spiritual storytelling. Did I mention the nerve-wracking car chase?
Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne keep making thoughtful, award-winning films
Yes, L'Enfant is one of the most artful and memorable films you'll see this year. That should come as no surprise, since it won the highest honorthe Palme d'Orat the Cannes Film Festival. What's even more amazing is that the filmmakers have won Cannes prizes for three films in a row: Rosetta (1996), Le Fils (The Son) (2004), and now this project.
Here's how it starts: Sonia (François) has just been released from the hospital with Jimmy, her newborn baby. Back at her apartment, she finds herself locked out. Her boyfriend, Bruno (Renier), has sublet it to some renters. Feeling frustrated and alone, she goes looking for him and finds him up to his usual tricksbegging and thieving.
Bruno doesn't seem too interested in the baby, but he's glad that Sonia's free at last. To celebrate, he buys her an expensive present. (Money, he seems to believe, is how you buy happiness.) They're both poor and, now, they're both homeless, so he checks them into a shelter. But it's only a short while before he's back out on the town, wheeling and dealing for more cash.
The next day, while Sonia's standing in line for some financial help, Bruno goes for a walk. And what he does next will astonish you, even if you already know it's coming.
Deborah Francois as Sonia and Jeremie Renier as Bruno
Further, the filmmakers put severe limitations on what we know about these characters. The camera sits on Bruno's shoulder and refuses to reveal information that he does not experience for himself. We have to learn through his eyes and ears about his circumstances, status, history, and relationships. The naturalistic dialogue is believable, but offers only fragments of information. This makes us watchful, and it makes both Bruno and Sonia fascinating.
Frantic music, erratic editing, special effects, frequent shifts in perspective, beautified actorswe've become accustomed to so many "enhancements" in our entertainment that it's hard to tell anymore if there's a quality story within the sound and fury. But the Dardennes' art is so concentrated, it doesn't need artificial enhancement. And their commitment to providing the equivalent of actual human experience has a curious effect: it makes the story much more genuinely suspenseful.
Thus, when the film suddenly explodes into a car chase, it's one of the most adrenalin-charged pursuits you've ever seen, even though it lacks the percussive soundtrack and multiple camera angles. You're on the edge of your seat because you have come to understand just how much is at stake for these characters.
Sonia is prepared to take care of Baby Jimmy
You'll also be surprised at how the Dardennes' attention to detail makes someone as reckless, hard-hearted, and cruel as Bruno into a compelling, engaging character. Because they start by focusing on Sonia's trials, we quickly learn just how willingly Bruno inconveniences others. Then, when we meet him, we are astonished. He's not the devil after all; he's not calculated, malevolent, and destructive; it's more like Bruno is missing a piece and malfunctioning. It's as if morality is a concept entirely alien to him. So narrow is his perspective, in fact, that he is thunderstruck by his girlfriend's dismay after he commits an unthinkable crime. This prods us to begin asking, "Why does he behave this way?" "What is motivating him?" "What has caused him to be so insensitive?"
And when we start asking those questions, the Dardennes have us right where they want us. L'Enfant, like Le Fils and Rosetta before it, feels like an episode in an alternate version of Krzysztof Kieslowski's Decalogue. Each Decalogue episode illustrated how one of the Ten Commandments is relevant to everyday life. L'Enfant is an efficient, simple tale focusing on moral decisions and their consequences. Can Bruno make up for his mistakes? Does he even want to? What will it take to awaken his conscience?
But L'Enfant is more than just a morality play. It is an investigation of the societal forces that create such misguided people, such overgrown children. And while the filmmakers don't serve up the answers in speeches, they allow all kinds of clues to come into the frame.
but Bruno doesn't show the same kind of responsible parenting
Sonia has the advantage; the way she carries her baby, it's clear that she's capable of caring about someone else intimately. Bruno carries a cell phone, and he behaves like a machinealways in motion, making connections, and predictably striving toward a single purposemoney. Even when he's alone, or standing around waiting, he can't stop typing in numbers and setting up transactions, regardless of their illegality. It's only when his "power supply," his funding, gets interrupted that he's willing to compromise and feign concern for someone else.
Like the Oscar-winning Tsotsi, the presence of a baby serves to highlight the problems in the heart of his reluctant caretaker. And yet, unlike the screaming infant of Tsotsi, who seemed desperate and needy, the baby in L'Enfant is almost supernaturally quiet, and rarely seen because of his blanket cocoon. Little Jimmy's behavior may be a bit unlikely, but it's a sign of the storytellers' unwillingness to take shortcuts to our emotions. Film critic Doug Cummings has noted that the Dardennes don't want us distracted by "cuteness." They want our attention on their designated subject: Bruno, and the forces shaping him.
It's worth considering another moral aspect of this film. Viewers are unlikely to find themselves in situations as desperate as Bruno's, but they are very likely to encounter people like him. Films like L'Enfant can cause us to question our assumptions about the people we hardly stop to notice. Is it too much to hope that a film might provoke us to greater compassion for those who lack the education, the opportunity, and the understanding that many of us have been given?