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| Dans l'Obscurite |
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Doug Cummings, filmjourney.org. 22 July, 2007. Original article here. Shifting its emphasis from hands to face, the camera offers more information: it's a male teenager crawling through a movie theater, yet his face is impassive and ambiguous, inviting further study. Is he escaping? Sneaking in without a ticket? Stalking someone? The fact that the lateral tracking shot catches regular glimpses of his face is perhaps the third self-reference to cinema in this film; like a live action zoetrope, the face appears and disappears behind the blackness of chairs with tantalizing rhythm. Then the hand again, as the boy slowly peels back the cloak and begins pickpocketing the woman seated next to him. We know it's a woman because the Dardennes allow us to see her bare arm, suggesting (or in the case of those familiar with Bresson, reminding us of) the sexual tension imbedded in the act of thievery. The hand sensuously undulates like a spider, rifling through the material in search of valuables. The scene is also a microcosm of Dardenne dramaturgy: two individuals meet in ethical tension. The darkness of the title could refer to the theater as well as the lack of awareness between characters; the boy sees the other as an object, the other doesn't see him at all. (Or so we think.) And in the filmmakers' Levinasian perspective, all thinking stems from encounters with the Other, with ethics serving as first and necessary prelude to all subsequent thought and interaction. The boy jerks back his hand, breaking--for the first time--the camera's magnetic attraction. Perhaps he has been caught? But as Schubert's sonata begins and Balthazar's famous last scene transpires, the woman is crying. She is not the first nor will she be the last spectator to find herself in tears at the end of Bresson's film, but perhaps she's also mourning the boy crawling on the floor for a bit of money, a confused and literally fallen person precisely for whom Bresson's film is a requiem? Does she know what he is doing when she snatches his hand for comfort? Does it matter? Eternal yet highly tentative optimists, the Dardennes suggest that human connection and renewal can transpire even in movie theaters, places otherwise immersed in darkness and vulnerability. |
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