The films of Rafaël
Ouellet are sad. In them the world is grim and people aren’t happy. This is a
given. If the working class characters in Camion
were depressed then Gurov and Anna
can reassure us that the middle
class also has its problems. It’s about an English professor Ben who,
obsessed with Chekhov’s The Lady with
the Dog, decides to have an affair with one of his students Mercedes. If
this story of a perverted old creep trying to get with one of his students
sounds familiar it’s since it is. Gurov
and Anna especially recalls the chamber dramas of a Bergman or an Allen. Luckily
there’s more to it. The filmmaking and its atmosphere are exceptional. Ouellet
is able to transcend some of the film’s clichés to get at the heart of things and to the human condition. Seeing Ben slowly loose control of his life and have his wife and lover, who become better writers than he is, leave him touches
upon the frailty and vulnerability of modern masculinity. There is a side Winter Sleep to Gurov and Anna. When Ben walks around Montreal in his awkward winter
coat and hat, creeping around street corners there is an air of Nosferatu about him. But what's especially
noteworthy is Sophie Desmarais as Mercedes. It’s a complex role and Desmarais gives her depth. Her sweet and artistic air within a
confusing and troubling modern life in Montreal especially recalls the earlier Carole Laure
performances in the films of Gilles Carle. There’s a couple of great scenes of
Desmarais on a stage at a café reading some Checkov. She gives the words a
whole new meaning through her interpretation and emphasis. If Québécois cinema already has
its musicians (Stéphane Lafleur), Hollywood types (Jean-Marc Vallée), and
outsiders (Denis Côté) then with Gurov and
Anna Rafaël Ouellet places himself as one of its foremost playwright director.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
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