Monday, November 8, 2010

L'Intrus

Claire Denis' film L'Intrus is a confusing experience only if you stick to certain expectations about what a film should be. Say good-bye to linearity and reality/non-reality. The film is dedicated to a book written by philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy, a book in which Nancy talks about having survived a heart transplant. The heart transplant is also the node of Denis' film. As elusive as this film is, it is hard to say anything about characters, story and so on. It is, however, clear that the film has a focal point, a central idea, or should we say a central cluser of images: an elderly man's heart and one a more metaphorical level, the alien heart as the intruder.

In the first part of the film, we see some relatively straightforward scenes that follow the man's dealings with his dogs, a lover and an antagonistic son. But these scenes are intermingled with far less explicable ones. A murder, dream-like arctic landscapes. During the second part of the film it is far less clear on what level of reality we are moving. The man travels to South Korea to have his operation. After that, he goes to Haiti, apparently on a quest for finding his son (oh wait there was something about a cargo ship, too...!). We see a dying man, now an intruder in his own right, haunted by consience.

It might be a cheap interpretation, but it is tempting to read the alien heart as the intrusion of conscience.

Denis knows everything about how to work with images. Sometimes I don't know what's going on, but I still find myself gasping for air: what a scene! What combination of movement, colors and sound! To be honest, I cannot spell out the exact relation between a woman driving a pack of dogs across an Arctic landscape, a corpse buried under the ice, the christening of a ship, a silent looong take where we simply gaze at the sea - but in the movie as a whole, I can look for certain threads, certain contrasts, associations. But I should pause here to say that if you like clever movies - don't watch it. If you like clever, dig somewhere else.

I would say that Claire Denis is one of the most important film-makers today. Few, if any, of her colleagues challenges the viewer's imaginative faculties like she does. My second reason for saying that is that few directors have such a physical grasp of what film can be about.

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