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Louis XVI washing the feet of the poor on Holy Thursday |
My hopes are not too high for
Un peuple et son Roi, since most films about the French Revolution are disappointingly inaccurate. Once again I fear we will be treated to a spectacle that frustratingly gets many things right while missing the point entirely. The film appears to perpetuate the myth of the spontaneous rising of the oppressed masses against a bloody tyrant, when in actuality the French Revolution was planned in glittering salons by Princes of the Blood, who resented Louis XVI's extensive reforms. Furthermore, Louis XVI was as far from being a tyrant as anyone could be. Sadly, once the royal authority was destroyed the French people suffered under genuine tyranny. Far more peasants were killed than aristocrats; it was often the peasants who were the most royalist, depending upon where they were from. According to
Screen Daily:
Pierre Schoeller’s account of the early years of the French Revolution,
told largely from the point of view of the working men and women who
fought for change, is a sturdy, intelligent, if only occasionally
stirring historical drama. Despite a great deal of talk, it may flummox
those without a decent grasp of the shifting sands of this tumultuous
moment in French history. Nevertheless, with its questions about
national identity and emphasis on the women of the revolution, it feels
like a timely film that may well chime with audiences.
One Nation, One King opens with the storming of the Bastille
in July 1789, after which the newly created National Assembly grapples
with the question of how much further to take the revolution, inexorably
moving towards the formation of the Republic a few years later – and
with that, of course, the small matter of what to do with King Louis
XVI. Most will know how that ends.
The film involves very little action. The taking of Bastille is
related after the event, the Parisian poor basking in their surprise
success, and other riots and confrontations similarly take place off
screen. There is one exception, in which continued disagreement about
the king leads to a rally and the massacre of demonstrators ordered by
the Assembly itself – a bitter pointer towards the schisms that will
remain within the revolutionary enterprise.
For the most part, Schoeller’s film involves talk and debate. Strange
as it may seem, there’s something reminiscent here of Robin Campillo’s
HIV drama 120 BPM. The 2017 film’s structure is dominated by
discussions amongst activists on how best to campaign for effective
action against the epidemic, with people’s different personal
experiences shaping their points of view. Here, the “people”, meaning
working class and the poor, are seen to be largely more inclined to
drive the revolution forward until they win palpable rights – and actual
food on the table – than many of the privileged and periwigged classes
who have assumed control of the assembly.
“Without Louis, the edifice crumbles,” says one assembly member,
revealing the practical and emotional ties to the monarchy, particularly
felt by aristocrats and others with more to lose. In contrast, the
lawyer Robespierre (Louis Garrel) is among those law-makers prepared to
cut the tie, quite literally; and many of the working-class
protagonists, including a glassblower known as L’Oncle (Olivier Gourmet)
and a washerwoman, Françoise (Adèle Haenel), are with him.
At the same time, women, seen here as prominent forces on the front
lines of the fighting, have no rights even to speak. Such contradictions
ensure that the film has a nuance appropriate to a movement that was
never a simple road to emancipation. Schoeller doesn’t direct with any
of the panache associated with French period drama, seemingly unwilling
to distract from his film’s serious intent to reveal the people and the
ideals at the heart of the revolution. This results in a certain
stiffness, and it a pity, too, that the poverty of the Parisian
commoners is disconcertingly airbrushed.
The passion comes from the performances. Aside from the inestimable
Gourmet whose character is driven by simple, directly-expressed
necessity, the biggest impressions are made by women: Izïa Higelin,
Céline Sallette (whose singing often rouses her character’s comrades and
the film itself) and in particular Haenel, whose Françoise loses a
child through malnutrition, speaks up for women’s rights and infuses her
drifter-lover (Gaspard Ulliel) with her revolutionary fervour.
Garrel is a thoughtful Robespierre, Laurent Lafitte a proud Louis,
but in keeping with Schoeller’s agenda both characters are marginal.
Some contextual captioning wouldn’t have gone amiss, without which, for
example, some audience members will be unaware of the former’s ironic
role in the Reign of Terror, as the revolutionaries started to turn on
themselves.(Read more.)
From
The Hollywood Reporter:
The main problem is that it’s never clear what the raison d’etre is for
this film; its new angle or singular point-of-view. It cuts between
different storylines for no apparent reason, culminating in the unlikely
back-and-forth between a glassblowing apprenticeship and an endless
roll-call vote in the assembly to decide on the fate — death, banishment
or imprisonment? — of their royal ruler. Potentially interesting
episodes, such as the women’s march, the planting of “freedom trees” or
the massacre on the Champs de Mars, are treated hastily and
superficially, with the film apparently trying to cover as many of the
events that occurred over the course of five years as possible in just
two hours. The supposedly tragic death of one of the characters only
serves to underline just how little we as an audience care for the
people on screen, despite the energy and hard work of performers such as
Haenel, who perhaps comes closest to moving the audience in a
confrontation with La Fayette. However, most of the time, Schoeller
seems more interested in details like making sure the many songs that
are sung are historically accurate — unlike in, say, Les Misérables — rather than in making audiences care about what happens to any of the characters or the country they live in. (Read more.)
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