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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Double slice of Belgian social-realism..., 8 May 2004
Brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne concern themselves with creating films that put realism on the screen without using artifice or cinematic trickery to distract the audience from the socially aware message at the core of their narratives. Unlike the dogme movement, or the works of Lars von Trier etc, the Dardenne brothers are unconcerned with changing the face of cinematic reality but rather, take their cue from people like Ken Loach... by creating honest, often-bleak works of film that take their character from despair, to hope, and sometimes, right back to despair, in order to give the audience a taste of the world away from DVD players, film magazines, and art-house cinemas. The concept is hypocritical admittedly, and, although the heavy-handed-ness of the brother’s work does occasionally become preachy, there is ample opportunity to deliver some moments of earth-shattering drama. I first encountered the Dardenne’s work back in 2001, when British film channel Film Four premiered their 1996 debut work The Promise, in preparation for the acclaimed follow up Rosetta. Both films are heavily indebted to Loach, particularly his films Raining Stones, Riff Raff and surprisingly, the then-un-produced My Name is Joe... with the filmmakers presenting the viewer with a series of characters continually forced to the brink of despair, but desperate to pull them-selves back. Of the two films collected on this disk, The Promise is the one that makes the greatest impact. The Dardenne’s here create a world that isn’t a million-miles away from the current social climate in the UK, with building sites, smoky pubs and migrant workers peppering what is essentially the typical rites-of-passage/coming of age movie so loved by Hollywood. The brothers rest their narrative firmly on the shoulders of young newcomer Jérémie Rénier as Igor, a young tear-away forced into looking after a young black mother and her baby following the death of the woman’s husband whilst working for the company run by Igor’s father... The brothers season the film with lots of moralistic issues such as the passage into adulthood, immigration, and domestic abuse, whilst at the centre of it all, featuring a touching father son relationship between Igor and his disparate dad (played here by award winning actor and regular Dardenne collaborator Olivier Gourmet). The second film, and the one that garnered the most attention when first shown at the Cannes film festival back in 1999 is Rosetta, a less successful continuation of the themes of La Promesse, featuring the brilliant Emilie Dequenne as a troubled young teenager desperately searching the Belgium ghettos for work, whilst also having to put up with an alcoholic mother, a lecherous landlord and a series of ignorant civil servants. The use of handheld cameras and jarring jump-cuts is greater this time around with the brothers seemingly intent on alienating the viewer, but also, expressionistically conveying the lead protagonist’s sense of cultural dislocation and alienation from the world around her... As that final paragraph might suggest, Rosetta is a bleak, bleak film, prefiguring the likes of Dancer in the Dark or Mike Leigh’s All or Nothing... However, unlike those films, the Dardenne’s are unable to overcome the clichés of the narrative, and, instead of offering us a searing indictment, or protests against the mass-unemployment of provincial France and Belgium, simply end up re-hashing a million and one kitchen sink films from the decades before. At this price, this double disk set might prove a little too steep for viewers and, unlike the Promise, Rosetta is hardly required viewing. My advice would be, to try and pick up one or the other film separately, or failing that, if you already know and love Rosetta, then The Promise should not be a disappointment. At any rate, though the scenarios and some of the characterisations might, for lack of a better word, be seen a clichéd, the intensity of the performances and technical skill from all the actors, weather professional or not, is outstanding.
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