In French with English Subtitles
Genre: Drama
Director: Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne
Starring: Jérémie Renier, Déborah
François, Jérémie Segard
RunTime: 1 hr 35 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films & Lighthouse
Pictures
Rating: PG
Opening Day: 11 May 2006
Synopsis:
The Child is the new social realist drama from Jean-Pierre
and Luc Dardenne, who won the Palme d'Or in 1999 with Rosetta.
It is the story of Bruno (Jérémie Renier), a
20-year-old petty thief whose 18-year-old girlfriend, Sonia
(Déborah François), has just had a baby, Jimmy.
She adores him, but Bruno isn't so sure - and one of Bruno's
fence contacts tells him there is big money to be made in
selling babies for black-market adoption. One of the most
suspect claims I've been hearing at Cannes on behalf of some
movies is that they are about "redemption", which
often turns out to be hardly more than a shallow style gimmick.
But The Child really is about redemption, and the film treats
this subject with the moral seriousness it deserves. Bruno's
fatherhood is contrasted with his quasi-paternal responsibility
to the Artful Dodger boy-thieves he controls, which brings
the movie to a crunch as Bruno faces the Dostoevskian responsibility
of giving himself up to the police. A moving and satisfying
film.
Movie Review:
L' Enfant (The Child) won the Palme d'Or at the 2005 Cannes
International Film Festival, and brought the writing and directing
duo, the Dardenne brothers, the rare honour of winning the
Palme d'Or twice. Expectations are naturally set high amongst
the audience on this film, but you have to see past the obvious
in order to enjoy the richness of the story.
As
introduced in the trailer, the obvious, physical infant here
is newborn Jimmy, the child of Bruno (Jérémie
Renier) and girlfriend Sonia (newcomer Déborah François).
The movie begins by jumping straight into the introduction
of Jimmy, we are not given the whos and the whats of this
new family, suffice to know that we now have a set of young
parents, who don't hold a stable income, or a steady job for
that matter, which raises questions as to how they are going
to sustain an additional mouth to feed.
It
takes a long hard look at the conventional relationships between
parents, as well as parenthood. Déborah François
did an excellent job in emoting Mother's love - ever protective
and loving, willing to go through lengths to ensure that her
baby is safe from harm, even at the risk of getting Bruno
into trouble. And this is something everyone can understand,
the extension of a natural emotional attachment between mother
and child after 9 months of pregnancy.
But
the true gem in the movie, is lead actor Jérémie
Renier's portrayal as Bruno. A frequent collaborator with
the Dardenne brothers, Renier brings out his complex character
brilliantly. A good for nothing, immature and easily manipulated
petty thief, his Bruno undergoes one of the most interesting
character change as the movie progresses. To Bruno, his newborn
son becomes a quick way to get money, having zero attachment,
by holding that suspicion that Jimmy might not be his anyway.
It's akin to getting a new toy which is disliked, and when
the situation presented itself, to exploit the opportunity
to get rid of it, in order to get something else more desired.
We
see the selfishness of his character in unilaterally making
that misguided decision to sell
off his child in the black market, the desperation when trouble
comes knocking and he couldn't handle it, of being caught
with his hand in the cookie jar. Trying to wriggle his way
out of trouble with white lies, he demonstrates what desperate
men would do when he needs support - that of running to his
own mother, knowing jolly well that all mothers would assist
without a bat of an eyelid. We contrast his childishness early
in the film, with his newfound maturity towards the end, seeking
redemption and forgiveness.
And
by the time the end credits roll, you'll know who the child
in the movie truly refers to. Although the delivery might
seem quite ordinary, and that the narrative just chugs along,
this movie belongs to one of those which doesn't present its
deep underlying thoughts with a sledgehammer, but only appreciated
in quiet moments after it's ingested.
Movie
Rating:
Review
by Stefan Shih
(A
satisfying film with an excellent character study of the dynamics
between parent and child, and the maturity that parenthood
brings)
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