Trance (15)
101 mins ***
In the
House (15) 105 mins ****
Fresh from warming our cockles with the Olympic
opening ceremony, Danny Boyle wants to mess with our minds. Trance is a
film seemingly designed to shuck off this director’s recently adopted mantle of
cuddly, Slumdog-peddling national
treasure – and instead remind us of the energetic iconoclast responsible for
the visceral one-two of Shallow Grave
and Trainspotting. Where that Games
opener evoked a fixed and certain sense of place, Trance depends on us not knowing where we are exactly. It begins on
familiar turf – with a London artworld heist – and thereafter charges headlong
towards disorientation.
We’re in a near-future London, for starters: one
just different enough to be disconcerting, where characters we might think
inhabit entirely separate worlds instead rub against one another, intimately,
aggressively, sometimes both. Vincent Cassel’s masterthief Franck snatches
Goya’s “Witches in the Air” mid-sale, knocking auctioneer Simon (James McAvoy)
unconscious. Rapidly hailed as a hero, Simon is dispatched to Dr. Elizabeth
Lamb (Rosario Dawson), a hypnotherapist charged with restoring his memory, but
she permeates everybody’s head – unsurprisingly, as Dawson’s features could get
a man to give up a painting, their sanity, anything.
We’re dealing with a violently bad case of
transference sparked by a potentially false memory, and Lamb only encourages
it: “I’ll admit it’s not conventional practice”. That’s Boyle’s credo, too.
Narrative and logic soon go broadly separate ways; dialogue and sound come
adrift from the image. Often we have only the stars, radiating charisma, to
guide us. Think Rififi as remixed by
Nic Roeg, that master of modish trippiness: it’s intended not to last but to
jolt, Rick Smith’s pulsing score and Jon Harris’s razor-sharp edits speeding us
around amid the hailstorm turbulence of Simon’s cranium.
Are we moved, though? Not quite. Amused and bemused,
yes; psyched, weirded and grossed out, often; stirred and chastened by the
critical depiction of the male psyche as a dark hinterland of fried breakfasts
and Barbie-doll fantasies, certainly. Emotionally, however, this is very much
cool Britannia. Trance may not be
enough for some, and will be too much for others: squeamish viewers might
prefer last year’s Ruby Sparks, which
tackled similar control issues without the putrefying corpses and full-frontal
nudity. Still, many – this viewer included – would now grant Boyle an Olympic
Park-sized free pass to make any film he likes. Judging by this sinuous strip
of pure cinema, he most likely could.
With In the House, French writer-director François Ozon continues
his project to reframe or redress conventional narratives: you may recall his
2002 musical murder-mystery 8 Women,
or 2004’s 5x2, with its love-match
played out in reverse. Here, he’s telling two stories, one born of the other.
Jaded writer-turned-teacher Germain (Fabrice Luchini) has had his interest
piqued by the one pupil of the Lycée Gustave Flaubert who can string a sentence
together. Each week, Claude (Ernst Umhauer) turns in a piercing anecdote drawn
from a classmate’s home – handwritten A4 sheets that, like a Dickens serial,
keep everybody on tenterhooks.
Not for the first time chez Ozon, an outsider will be spotted inveigling themselves into
bourgeois households. Claude’s vivid, gossipy descriptions of the classmate’s
blokey father and bored mother provide compulsive bedtime reading for Germain
and distraction-hungry wife Jeanne (Kristin Scott Thomas). Each element starts
to comment on every other. Germain ponders whether to intervene when Claude
starts to stray in too deep: should he encourage the boy to seduce the mother
in the interests of a racier narrative? Or – as a responsible adult – does he
caution restraint? What is it we want from our stories?
Ozon effortlessly swats that canard about writing
not making involving cinema, partly through his superb cast, but mostly by
inspired composition: in correcting the story’s direction, the teacher
remembers he can change the course of a life. We, too, become eavesdroppers,
hearing Ozon initiate a dialogue with his younger self, and strive to tell an
affecting story while critiquing his own wilder impulses. “C’est du Barbara Cartland!,” exclaims Germain as one of his
protégé’s drafts takes a turn for the florid. One of French cinema’s foremost enfants terribles here finally grows up:
this elegant and eloquent film weighs its words and images with commendably
mature precision.
Trance is in cinemas nationwide; In the House is on selected release.
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