Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Movie: Rust and Bone


It took me a while to build up the courage to watch this film. I was afraid it would be too depressing, knowing a little of the story line. It helps to remind myself that no matter how depressing a film is, if it's good, I'll always return from it with the feeling of having learned something about life and human nature. Last night telling myself that a few times "you'll learn something, it'll be alright," I decided to turn it on and suffer through. What I watched wasn't at all what I was expecting. Yes, there is a fair amount of disaster, but that's not what this film is about.

This film is about adapting to disaster, feeling the emotions that come from it and trying not to despair. Marion Cotillard's character Stephanie is a trainer of killer whales. Her passion for her job is made very clear and her connection to the marine beasts is unmistakable. You can feel a sense of mutual respect when she gives an order to them, watching them leap out of the water with graceful ferocity. This scene gives way to the first disaster. One of the orcas leaps onto the stage where Stephanie is giving direction and slides into her, crushing her legs. She wakes up in a hospital a double amputee. Marion is beautiful in every sense of the word and a dimension of her character Stephanie is that she relies on her beauty, toying with men, watching them perform for her. This is the first parallel to her profession.

She gives a back story of how she likes to go out to night clubs alone and drum up passion and jealousy, watching as the beasts perform for her. On one particular night a bouncer takes her home after one of the nameless men takes his frustration and jealousy out on her. Stephanie is put off by the the bouncer, Matthias, at first. He's blunt, aggressive, and seemingly careless. But, as she tests him she feels more comfortable with him, again, like her killer whales. He's an unrefined beast and she's captivated by his ferocity, his dominance over other men and after her accident, she relies on his lack of emotional weight to bring her out of despair.

He makes a perfect partner during the most difficult of times. One scene illustrates this perfectly. He takes her out in her wheel chair and seeing the ocean shore nearby decides that he wants to go swimming. He asks her to if she wants to as well and she says no, possibly fearing the environment that caused her injury. Without hesitation Matthias leaves her and heads to the shore. After a few minutes realizing she's made a mistake she yells to him. He comes back and carries her into the water. A more gentle man would have gone along with her sentiment and just kept walking, trying to comfort her, but Matthias treated her as temperamental and ridiculous for not wanting to do something she would obviously love.

In time Stephanie realizes the price of spending time with someone so impulsive. She is taken to a night club, stirring up old memories of her dominance. Now she views herself as powerless, devoid of the beauty she once had. Matthias doesn't realize the weight of this, how fragile Stephanie might be and takes home another girl in front of her. In the moment she's devastated and feeling defeated, lets him leave. The next day she makes it clear that that behavior is not acceptable, that she cares about him and demands that if he cares for her, he must show it. She is once again trying to train a beast.

The filmmaker guides us through Matthias's life as well. He has a son, he's living with his sister struggling to find work. To make some easy cash he gets mixed up in an underground bareknuckle fighting ring. Through all of these minor conflicts he leaves a trail of wreckage behind him. I won't mention the final conflict because it's worth witnessing without warning, but the theme is that normal every day life can allow people to focus too much on petty conflicts while disasters pull people together. It's a horrible thought that we require disaster to feel solidarity, but it's often the case. This film is so mutli-dimensional, but that's the point that fulfills my original intention of learning something. Personal conflicts are often petty and it's so important to put them aside now and again and see other people as people, see humanity as a family capable of dealing with the worst of human disaster.

Needless to say, I loved the film

5/5

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