Nomination
for Best Supporting Actress (Charlotte Rampling)
CESAR 2005 (French Academy Award)
Nomination for Audience Award for Best Actress (Charlotte
Rampling)
European Film Award
In French with English Subtitles
Genre: Thriller
Director: Dominik Moll
Starring: Laurent Lucas, Charlotte Gainsbourg,
Charlotte Rampling
RunTime: 2 hrs 9 mins
Released By: Festive Films and Cathay-Keris
Film
Rating: PG
Website: http://www.festivefilms.com/lemming
Opening Day: 31 August 2006
Synopsis
:
LEMMING
marks the eagerly awaited follow-up to Dominik Moll's hugely
successful thriller, 'Harry, He's Here to Help'. LEMMING provides
another tension-filled, off-kilter riff on the interactions
of two couples.
Alain
Getty (Laurent Lucas), a young and brilliant engineer, and
his wife Benedicte, (Charlotte Gainsbourg) move to a new city
following Alain's work transfer. They invite Alain's new boss
(André Dussolier) and his wife (Charlotte Rampling)
to dinner one evening.
However
the difference between the two couples couldn't be more extreme:
on one hand the
young model couple, on the other, a pair corroded by hate
and resentment.
This
disastrous dinner and the discovery of a mysterious dead rodent
in the kitchen sink waste
pipe marks the descent into pandemonium of their once perfect
life.
Movie
Review:
A childless, young upwardly mobile couple have recently moved
into Bel Air, France after the breadwinner, Alain Getty (Laurent
Lucas), is offered a prominent engineering post at a home
automation development firm. His waifish plain-jane wife,
Benedicte (Charlotte Gainsbourg), stays home to fix up the
new house for their idyllic and promising futures together.
On the other end of the age and marriage spectrum are Alain’s
boss, Richard (Andre Dussollier) and his wife Alice Pollock
(Charlotte Rampling) who are bitterly unhappy, jaded and loveless.
Rampling,
who ages beautifully here, is the film’s undisputed
ace in the hole. Alice’s dour disposition, invective
barbs and countenance bears years of experience and portrays
a failing resilience. She unsettles the characters and audience
through sheer concentration in her eyes, fueled by sexual
psychosis and misanthropic menace. She proves indispensable
in Dominik Moll’s “Lemming” by embodying
the essence of the film’s desire to be inscrutable,
sinister and haunting.
After
a riled dinner invitation from the Gettys’ to the Pollocks’,
their conversance brings together unexpected revelations and
nasty consequences for the young couple. Much like Mike Nichol’s
classic 1966 meditation on adult relationships in “Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”, there is so much more to
be said for what stays undisclosed than what is eventually
revealed in this tense chamber piece when the worlds of these
contrasting marriages collide. I would go amiss if I didn’t
offer up a caveat before anyone embarks on this film, since
one should not go into this with preconceptions of the plot
from mere synopsis and should shed presumptions about its
utterly fluid and amorphous genre.
Ambiguity
is the main agenda when it comes to “Lemming”
and is wide open to interpretations that correspond with its
intrinsic logic. A supernatural, metaphysical appeal is absorbed
into the reaching and mind-warping narrative that is telling
of the impacts towards bourgeois ennui that are brought upon
by sudden and unwelcome confrontations with the couples’
hidden and tacit insecurities. It never betrays the overwrought
and complex buildup to its atmosphere of foreboding that’s
layered with a compellingly portentous and minimalist sound
design brilliantly augmenting the ominous quality of its anxious
interactions.
Right
at its core, “Lemming” is a tale of imaginative
and capricious parallels that is executed with Lynchian bravura
at its major highs but ends up tangling itself with structural
knots during its manic lows. Apart from its digressions concerning
supernatural connotations and over-the-top reactions, the
overly patient and disquieting approach draws a certain semblance
to Haneke’s “Cache” in the structuring of
quaint suburban lives dealing with intrusion and its subsequent
disintegration of those lives. Eccentricies and composed sensibilities
clash and constantly pound through the façade of marriage
with its simmering betrayal and analogous coincidences. A
lingering sense of melancholy fused with some searing and
blackly comic humour (as life tends to encompass) backdrops
the enigmatic lemming found in the Gettys’ sink pipes
whose very inauspicious nature is a metaphor to the humans’
own emotional sandbags.
The
pantomimic attempts at intrigue in the film’s latter
half with an increased emphasis on shadowy representations
leaves much to our imaginations, often leaving us alone in
its translation. Ratiocinating the narrative through conventional
means will lead nowhere as Moll constantly effleurages his
riddle by adding on more questions than answers. Patience
is indeed a virtue when it is attributed to this anticlimactic
effort. It plays on different levels and added dimensions
where a heuristic approach tends to tell more lies than truths.
“Lemming” is a fine cinematic example of the nothingness
of everything, the surrealistic picture of a descent into
paranoia and resentment that’s most engaging after the
credits start to roll and Mama Cass starts to croon.
Movie Rating:
(Threatens to overstay its welcome with its relatively long
runtime, but is a rare throwback to Victorian-style thrillers
when given enough backbone and discernment)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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