Antonin (right) spars verbally with his love Cassiopée, while her new admirer silently watches in the background |
The film is built around the pivotal
character, Antonin, married, but staying away from his wife, Eglantine. Where?
In a friend’s Volkswagen! Antonin, we realize is prone to making up unreal stories,
is well read, deft with language wordplay, and is a thief, vandalizing cars in
the process. The director/screenplay-writer Denis Côté’s central character
encounters four ladies apart from his wife Eglantine. He meets with his sister,
Solveig; his secret love, Cassiopée; a lady named Rose from the Ministry of
Revenue tracking him down to coerce him to cough up his unpaid tax dues; and
finally, Aurore, who has been also tracking him to get back a jacket and a computer
he stole from her car, and some compensation for smashing its windows to steal
those items.
Antonin talks to his wife Eglantine |
Antonin talks to Rose (note she wears pink), the tax collector who can send him to prison |
All the meetings with the five ladies
are staged like a Samuel Beckett play with two or three characters (always
including Antonin) in open grassy fields, often on the edges of forests. There
is minimal movement from the characters often rooted to the same spot; only
wordplay ensues with pregnant pauses between spoken lines. The only exceptionally
active scene is Aurore dancing by herself in the forest to music, the source of
which is never revealed. Why and what provokes Aurore, a theology student who
works in a McDonald’s outlet, to suddenly dance or decide to take an interest
in criminals is an amusing conundrum. To the casual viewer, the social criticism
of Facebook, internet and taxes in the script may not be obvious. All the
characters have lines to speak that refer to the ills of contemporary society
and lifestyles.
Antonin interacts with Solveig, his sister, after she states that she found a lover at a restaurant Note: She is still holding her wine glass |
Côté’s Antonin (mostly captured by the static
camera in long shots, with a rare close-up towards the end of the film) is
revealed as a filmmaker struggling to complete his script, and responds to Aurore’s
revelation that she is a student of theology thus: “I believe in myself. I believe I can find the keys to my enigmas in my
life by myself.”
Antonin returns the jacket he stole from Aurore's car to her. Note: Aurore's dress differs from those worn by other women |
When asked about when and where he met
his wife, Antonin wittily replies “I met
my wife in a zoo, by the cage of the hyena. The rest is a long quiet river.”
In Côté’s interesting script, the best
lines are not invested with Antonin alone. Antonin’s love Cassiopée calls him a
narcissist and says “You are 100 times dead.
I love you as a zombie....Men are like mushrooms. The more handsome they are the
more poison they contain.” The cocky Antonin pleads and buckles under Rose’s
threat “I have the key to your prison
cell at the edge of my pen,” to pay his taxes. To Aurore, Antonin agrees to
return the jacket and computer. His sister, Solveig, finally finds a lover over
tea and long tales, uttering the words “Carpe
Diem.” His wife, too, leaves him for another lover. The once confident and witty
Antonin is completely “socially distanced.”
Antonin holds a flower he wishes to present to his love Cassiopée (center, background) while his wife (left) notes it all and decides to leave her philandering husband |
Denis Côté, the filmmaker is essentially
a charming, absurdist playwright, who stages his written work in natural open surroundings
with clearly demarcated stage markings for his actors in grassy patches with distant
bird, animal, and traffic sounds on the soundtrack. The rare body movements of
most characters are in sharp contrast to Aurore flexible body movements during
her dancing spell in the film.
Aurore dances in the forest, the only character in the film who moves a lot physically |
While Côté presents verbal sparring that
will interest most viewers, there are details that some could miss. The clothes
worn by all actors are period costumes a century old, with the sole exception
of Aurore’s clothes that are contemporary. Thus her clothes and her dance
movements are in interesting contrast to all other characters. Is Côté
suggesting that Antonin’s appropriate love interest should be Aurore, not the
characters wearing century-old costumes? Antonin does confess he finds Aurore
attractive.
Antonin (Maxim Gaudette) levelled by all women: The only close-up shot in the entire film |
Then there is a deliberate smudge in the
static vision to the left corner of the First Act in the countryside with Antonin
sparring with his sister possibly to accentuate the picture postcard shot, because
Solveig retains her hands-on-the-hips pose for a long while. When the static
camera moves, there seems to be a purpose to intervene in the social distancing
of the actors and the camera.
Denis Côté’s film provides unusual
entertainment for those who can appreciate good playwrights and a totally fresh
approach to the medium that is visually and verbally witty. A very interesting
filmmaker setting a new style!
P.S. Social Hygiene won the Best Director award at the Berlin
Film Festival’s “Encounters” section and the Best Director award at the Fajr
Film Festival in Iran. This film is one of the best films of 2021 for the author.
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