Winner of 8 Cesar Awards 2006
Winner of Best Film not in the English Language at BAFTA Awards
2006
Nominee for Golden Bear at Berlin Film Festival 2005
In French with English Subtitles
Genre: Drama
Director: Jacques Audiard
Starring: Romaine Duris, Niels Arestrup
RunTime: 1 hr 48 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Sexual References)
Opening Day: 27 July 2006 (Exclusively at
the Picturehouse)
Synopsis:
A superb remake of James Toback's 1978 FINGERS finds a ne-'er-do-well,
who works with two scheming real estate men, decides to return
to the playing the piano and envisions this to be a life-changing
event. While struggling to regain his mastery of the piano,
with a Vietnamese teacher, he is called upon by his partners
to participate in shady deals and even help one of them cheat
on his wife.
Movie Review:
A re-tooling, if you will, of James Toback’s avant-garde
Fingers (1978) which starred Harvey Keitel as Jimmy Fingers,
a thug who’s also a prodigiously gifted pianist torn
between his conflicting worlds. This re-imagined take is given
the European treatment. Replacing grit with style and intimidation
with frisson, it’s still a dangerous ride through the
seedy criminal underbelly of Paris. Seen entirely through
the eyes of a singular character, an educated thug by the
name of Thomas Seyr (Romain Duris), it’s a chamber piece
of an individual’s warring heart and mind.
The
first time we see Thomas is during a conversation he has with
his irked business associate who explicates his theory of
the reversal of roles that fathers and sons inevitably share.
Thomas distractedly listens, unaware of an impending change
in his life. Quickly cutting to his job, we’re allowed
to see the amorality and unscrupulousness that he is surrounded
by, which serves him monetarily and later sexually. We’re
then introduced to his father (Niels Arestrup), and Thomas
learns about his impending nuptials. There’s a discernable
undercurrent of hostility in the affection he feels for his
father. To understand Thomas, we have to know his past.
He’s
a product of 2 dichotomous environments. His father’s
a brute, using his insidious influence over his son to suit
his needs. And his mother, fits into the other extreme as
a gifted concert pianist who molded Thomas’s talents.
But alas, her training and protection from the sins of his
father ceased when she passed away. Left with his father,
Thomas becomes him, all while being disgusted at the outcome
of his life. When an unexpected opportunity knocks at his
door in the form of his mother’s old musical acquaintance,
he feels a new sort of obligation – to himself. Constantly
shrouded in ambivalence and hindered by his father’s
business dealings, he finds it difficult to pursue his newly
reawakened artistic desire. His survival instinct has clouded
his ambition and his anger has outstripped his passion.
Thomas
proceeds to hire a fresh-off-the-boat Chinese piano coach
to find a foothold and the balance that he needs to focus
himself for an upcoming audition. Miao Lin (Linh-Dan Pham)
doesn’t speak a word of French, just as he doesn’t
speak a word of Mandarin. While it provides some of the scarce
humour in the film, it could have easily been a superfluous
touch in a lesser film. Fortunately and significantly she
becomes another insatiable figure of authority in his life,
albeit with hints of flirtatious misgivings between them.
No doubt due to Duris’s dashing and captivatingly unstable
portrayal of his relentlessly proud and heated Thomas. More
importantly, she ups the Oedipal factor, playing a bright
and reassuring figure to his derisive and dismissive father
While
not having the furious intensity of Harvey Keitel, Duris does
play an enthralling and unpredictable character. Erudite but
not above choosing to use his fists, he’s cool and calculated
as opposed to his predecessor’s frenzied and manic meltdowns.
It’s a far cry from his most international role as Xavier
in L’ Auberge Espagnole and The Russian Dolls.
Duris’s
versatility complements the director’s (Jacques Audiard)
remarkable agility in constructing subtle yet profound shifts
in the narrative’s tone, from rage to desperation to
gloom with a continual hint of apprehension. Unmistakably
French neo-noir, his direction effortlessly scales the emotional
terrain of a troubled man in search of his past and his reciprocal
future.
Movie
Rating:
(Acute
and compelling character study of a walking time bomb with
an explosive performance by Romain Duris)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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