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When
you go to the multiplex, you don't normally have the option
of leaving feeling angry or even dirty - unless of course
you've wasted an hour or two's wages on a stinker of a film
and a large bag of popcorn drenched in so much faux-butter
that the bag stained your pants. So if you're looking to find
an outlet for actually feeling something other than a false
sense of security, most of the time you've got to look to
the art house circuit or the unfamiliar faces at the video
store.
In
his first three times scripts, Simon Boisvert (Guys,
Girls and a Jerk) showed a knacked for challenging
the mainstream's status quo that relationships in movies need
to end in kisses and live happily ever after simply because
of an isolated act of romance or some sense of fate. Boisvert
lives in the real world, you know the place where love can
get ugly. Barmaids marks Boisvert's first foray into
directing (while still writing and starring), yet another
feel-bad exploration at romance that focuses on its characters
first and leaves the action to others.
Alex
(Boisvert) is soon to be married. While it might seem like
a Hollywood ending, Lyne (Caroline Gendron) isn't right for
him. Controlling and suffocating, Lyne smothers Alex. It shouldn't
be surprising then that Alex has a wandering eye to put it
politely. He doesn't make much of a secret about it either.
Rather than take the hard route of breaking up, Alex goes
around sleeping with other women. His latest conquest is Isabelle
(Elise Beaumont), a bartender and aspiring actress at his
local watering hole. Like Alex did with Lyne, Isabelle messes
with him, stringing him along like everything in their relationship
is good. Blinded by love, Alex isn't able to see how destructive
his latest affair is.
Barmaids
is blunt and to the point. The screen is filled with detestable
people who follow a creed of selfishness. Boisvert is not
afraid to confront the darker sides of humanity, tackling
the side of love that you don't normally see in film. The
script has the subtly of an elephant stampeding through a
car lot of Minis. In other words it's not subtle at all. On
the one hand this is an advantage because it's so direct,
the point is clear. There's never a moment where you don't
know what Boisvert is trying to say. He challenges the happy
side of love and confronts just how ugly it can make us.
Still
subtlty can also be a virtue. It lets things emerge without
the necessity for perennial fireworks and grand entrances.
Barmaids gets to the point, but it often does so in
a way that isn't at all challenging to watch outside of the
fact that the point of view isn't the same that you normally
encounter. A lot of the imagery, while it does have meaning,
doesn't stretch the common ways in which they are used.
There
is at least one exception, though. I found Boisvert's use
of water to be particularly intriguing. Traditional symbolism
uses water as a metaphor for life and clensing. Here, water
is representative of the opposite. The film opens with Alex
and Sonia getting intimate in a bathtub. Later, Alex and Lyne
get cozy in a swimming pool. Clearly, water is where Alex
finds joy but in doing so he is also being deceptive, hurting
those around him.
Another
case of mixed results is Boisvert's use of the camera. Even
if it is his first feature directing, he does show some confidence
as well as a willingness to test things out. Like most tests,
it's not perfect. There are a couple of sex scenes in which
the frames are slowed into a strobe-like montage that looks
clunky and takes away a lot of their possible meaning.
Barmaids
is a mixed bag. It's often not the prettiest film to look
at but it is one that presents an alternative point of view
that often alludes us in the name of entertainment. Boisvert
continues to develop as a filmmaker, building off his knack
for tracking genuine human emotion - good and bad - and digging
beyond where we feel comfortable and safe.
©Movie
Views; March 29, 2005
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