A 2019 French, Canadian film co-production [Mille et une
Productions (Paris), Metafilms Inc. (Quebec)]
Producers: Giles Daust, Catherine Dumonceaux, Sylvain
Corbeil, Farès Ladjimi, Hejer Anane, Galilé
Marion-Gauvin
Director: David Perrault
Story: David Perrault
Screenplay: David Perrault
Cinematography: Christophe Duchange [color]
Music: Trevor Anderson, Sébastien Perrault
Running time: 118 minutes
Cast:
Victor - Kevin Janssens
Esther – Alice Isaaz
Justine - Déborah François
Samuel – Pierre-Yves Cardinal
Grand Chef – Vincent Grass
De Lisle - Grégoire Colin
Bettie – Kate Moran
Edmond
– Bruno Todeschini
Madeleine – Constance Dollé
Miss Davis – Lee Delong
Abigaëlle – Maryne Bertieaux
Contrebandier – Michel Gregory Dagenais
Layla – Armelle Abibou
With: Marc de Panda, Bamar Kane
When the American Civil War breaks out, a family of french
settlers must abandon their Missouri home to
flee and go back to Paris.
Edmond, the
patriarch, is accompanied by his wife Madeleine, their maid Layla and their
three daughters: Esther, Justine and Abigaelle. Esther, the youngest, is
irresistibly attracted to Victor, a former mercenary who's escorting them. This
relationship soon acts like a poison within the group of travelers, especially when
Victor's past is catching up with him.
You Tube Trailer link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcLlv8todCg
Cineuropa
By Fabien Lemercier
Review: Savage
State
David Perrault plays with the codes of the western in a
peculiar, almost gothic film of uneven strangeness, imbued with a ghostly,
romanesque quality.
A trade of perfumes for (fake) diamonds that turns into a
shootout; a tense ball where drunk, triumphant Northerners pester the local
women, treated as prostitutes under General Order No. 28; a horse carriage
oscillating on the verge of a cliff; hooded bandits chasing a convoy; rifles,
galloping horses, dynamite and even a touch of voodoo; thick fog and a
snowstorm in the great American West where railways are about to change
everything: with Savage State, which had its international premiere in the
Voices Rotterdämmerung section of the 48th International Film
Festival Rotterdam, David Perrault attacks the western genre head-on, an
extremely rare entreprise for a young French filmmaker.
Revealed in Critics’ Week in Cannes in 2013 with Nos heros
sont morts ce soir (which was already a stylistic reinterpretation, of
1930s American cinema this time), the director/writer attempts to respect the
codes of the genre (its wide landscapes, its harshness, its face-offs and viril
men) all the while deforming them (with a hyper-expressive visual style that
pushes the film towards the fairytale and the waking nightmare, and with the
central role played by women in the story). An audacious entreprise which isn’t
without its risks…
It is December 1863 in St.
Charles, Missouri,
and the American Civil War is raging. Threatened by the arrival of Northerners
and the crumbling of their sheltered world, a bourgeois family of French
colonisers decides to flee and return to Europe
with the three daughters of the house, all of them fit to be married: Esther (Alice Isaaz)
who gives the film its point-of-view, Justine (Déborah François) and
Abigaelle (Maryne
Bertiaux). Edmond,
the father (Bruno
Todeschini), hires the experienced mercenary cowboy Victor (Kevin Janssens)
to lead the expedition, which also includes his extremely religious wife
Madeleine (Constance
Dollé) and his lover Layla (Armelle Abibou), the black
maid of the family. But a gang of blood-thirsty outlaws headed by Bettie (Kate Moran),
a woman dangerously obsessed with Victor, is on their trail…
With very contrasted visual choices (shadows and
backlighting, slow-motion, contrasted colours, blurriness and fragmentation),
David Perrault creates an atmosphere verging on the surreal which struggles to
imbue the confined spaces of the film’s first act, before blossoming in the
later spectacular natural landscapes where the film seems much more at ease.
Mixing together (too) many topics and styles in its ambition to tackle the
paradoxes of freedom and emptiness under a feminist angle, and to respect the
tropes of the western all the way playing with them, Savage State
struggles to find a clear personal identity in a series of scenes that are
alternately really interesting and excessively theatrical. A set-up where the
actors are not without merit, but which leaves the sensation of a strange
cinematic experiment within the genre of the European western, which was
recently explored much more wisely and efficiently in Gold, by German director
Thomas Arslan, and in Jacques Audiard’s The Sister’s Brothers, for example.
Produced by Mille et Une Productions and by Metafilm (Canada), Savage State
is sold internationally by Pyramide, which will also release the film in French
cinemas on 26 February.
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