Genre: Drama
Director: Julian Schnabel
Cast: Mathieu Amalric, Emmanuelle Seigner,
Marie-Josée Croze, Max Von Sydow
RunTime: 1 hr 52 mins
Released By: Festive Films
Rating: NC-16
Official Website:
http://www.festivefilms.com/divingbell
Opening Day: 24 January 2008
Synopsis:
The
Diving Bell and the Butterfly is an award-winning 2007 film
directed by Julian Schnabel. Based on the French memoir Le
scaphandre et le papillon by Jean-Dominique Bauby it describes
his life after suffering a massive stroke at the age of 42
that left him with a condition called locked-in syndrome,
leaving his only means of communication as blinking his left
eyelid.
Movie Review:
The much vaunted “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”
has an undeniably inventive and captivating visual style but
its truest successes lie in the simple moments of genuine
emotional clarity that Cannes winner and Golden Globe winning
director, Julian Schnabel crafts within his flourishes. Based
on the true story of Jean-Dominique Bauby (Mathieu Amalric),
the 43-year-old bon vivant editor of Elle France, who suffered
a ruthless stroke that left him totally paralysed save for
a single eye, is left veritably “locked-in”, as
the doctors tells him. Fully cognisant but with the barest
of responses, Bauby learns to slowly and painfully communicate
through blinks of his left eye. The title refers to the disparity
of existence that his consciousness feels, his mind is liberated
as a butterfly but his body threatens to tether and submerge
him.
While
the source material of the film (unread by me) takes on a
meta quality late on in the proceedings, the film translates
the experience of experiencing an experience to a whole other
level of appreciation, an assault on our optical senses by
presenting a significant portion of film from the subjective
point of view of Bauby, every tinge of fear amplified by a
needle closing in, the constant dependence and the creeping
realisation of an inescapable nightmare. Then Schnabel and
Ronald Harwood’s screenplay wisely incorporates moments
of reflection and memories from Bauby, releasing its aesthetics
from the fringes of gimmickry by flashbacks and a surrealistic
energy as ethereal as it is pulverising.
Jazzed
up on the film’s plaintive moods (most evidently in
a brutal love triangle and the evanescence of fatherhood),
the film is engrossingly devastating, but when Schnabel is
in more calculating and blustering moods, the film can adversely
turn on itself by becoming so precious and patently uninspiring.
But the film’s descent into an anonymous stirring tale
is halted by its filmmaker's intensity towards elevating the
material. With Harwood’s narrative ellipses sharp as
scalpels, Bauby becomes more than just a character; he becomes
the person Schnabel can muse upon.
Amalric
offers more panache to his role than he is offered back. We
believe the inner snark, the wry narration that punctuates
each new endeavour and each reevaluation of Bauby’s
life. Neither saint nor sinner, Bauby’s actions that
eventually led to his slender memoir of experiences told letter
by letter with the help of a translator (Anne Consigny) and
speech therapist (Marie-Josee Croze) are revealed to be an
individual’s strength and resilience personified.
Schnabel’s
idealistic dalliance with indulgence is tempered by Harwood’s
gentle script that allows a consistently affecting (though
fleetingly cursory) narrative to flow between its satellite
characters and Bauby becomes the film’s sincerest ode
to a remarkable story.
Movie
Rating:
(Visually daring and intensely interesting, but leaves a fair
bit of its emotional baggage at the door)
Review by Justin Deimen
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