☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Beau Travail (1999) -- C. Denis
Taking Melville's
Billy Budd (which I have not read) as a launching point, Claire Denis
transposes the action to Djibouti and the French Foreign Legion. Denis Lavant
(more recently the star of Carax's Holy Motors) conveys the story of his own
expulsion from the Legion in flashback and voiceover from a disillusioned point
in the future where he escapes into extreme dancing at the local discotheque.
The story focuses on his jealousy toward a younger Legionnaire who has captured
the attention of the commanding officer and Lavant's attempts to discredit him.
However, the story is only a loose framework that allows Denis to show her
complete mastery of film language. Indeed, this film triumphs in a glorious
visual style dotted with beautiful abstract patterns, carried along by superb
editing that mixes and matches segments shot differently into a vibrant
whole. True, I drifted at times, but a
second viewing or one on the big screen might curb that tendency.
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