| From France,
the beguiling, haunting Olivier Olivier is Polish filmmaker Agnieszka Holland’s
companion-piece to her Europa Europa from the year before. Both,
fact-based, center on an adolescent boy whose life is unimaginably rough—in
Solomon’s case, in Europa Europa, because he is a German Jew impersonating
a Nazi to elude imprisonment and death; in Olivier’s case, because, a runaway
from home where he was sexually abused, he ekes out a perilous existence
as a prostitute. Olivier, also, leads a “double life,” once he expediently
slips into the role of Elizabeth and Serge Duval’s son, who disappeared,
at age nine, six years ago. And, like Solomon, he gets away with
it, convincing even the parents. Indeed, some of his behavior argues
that he must be little Olivier six years hence, even though, eventually,
the child’s remains are discovered in a neighbor’s basement. We have,
then, a mystery of time and identity, of the order of Krzysztof Kieslowski’s
masterpiece, The Double Life of Veronique (1991). And we have one
film mirror-imaging the other; for, if Europa Europa is the story of a
boy with two identities, then Olivier Olivier is the story of two boys
with the same identity. How different their fates, though.
Solomon Perel`s impersonation—his double being—rescues him, reuniting him
with the one other family member of his to survive the Holocaust; but,
bound by guilt, Olivier sacrifices his search for his own mother in order
to adopt permanently the role of the Duvals’ lost son.
Informing the film is
Charles Perrault’s “Little Red Riding Hood.” When nine-year-old Olivier
takes off from his parents’ country home, on his sister’s bicycle, he is
wearing his red 49ers cap and is headed to his ailing grandmother`s house
with a basket of food that his mother prepared; en route, he is lured off
the path by a “wolf”—Marcel, whose sexual overtures precipitate the child`s
death down a flight of stairs. (For an even more bizarre and terrifying
updating of the story, consult Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now (1973).)
In a silly, later version of the tale, the child, ripped from the wolf`s
belly, survives. Holland`s film, then, encompasses both versions;
by impersonating, or replacing, the dead boy, Olivier—to apply Elizabeth’s
phrase describing her son’s miraculous recovery from his almost fatal premature
birth—is “born twice.”
Little Red Riding Hood’s
vulnerability is encapsulated by her namelessness; her only “protection,”
symbolized by the cloak her grandmother made for her, is the family identity
that contests her right to an identity of her own. This child exists
solely as a family extension; the family permits her none of the individuality
or independence that might save her. In Holland’s splendid film,
both Oliviers are likewise victims of “family”: the nine-year-old, whose
dependence on her his
mother, almost hysterically
fearful of losing him, has fostered, whose neglected, jealous sister, Nadine,
terrorizes him, and whose surrogate father, Marcel, tries molesting him,
causing his death; the fifteen-year-old, whose mother, ignorant of what
was happening under her own roof, failed to protect him from the stepfather
who raped him. Moreover, the latter boy ends up appropriated by the
Duvals, with whom he remains in order to console them and keep them on
an even keel, and to assuage his guilt for having pretended to be their
son in the first place. The most radical reading of all this is that
the film implies that the pressure that family members feel to flesh out
the form and features of a myth makes any family, in effect, “surrogate”;
the non-surrogate “reality” becomes the fantasy ideal every family must
fail to realize. In the meantime, Olivier`s life is destroyed.
It misses the point completely to suggest that, since “Olivier” has found
the Duvals and the Duvals have found him, everyone benefits from the arrangement,
because none of them will ever be lonely again. Like Little Red Riding
Hood, “Olivier” ends up having no name or identity except what “the
family”—here, the Duvals—self-servingly confers on him. His life
is over before it hardly began.
The film opens with what,
in retrospect, is bleak irony. The screen is black. We hear
a plaintive tune. Marcel, the young man whistling it, bicycles through
a field; it is the tune he later plays as a trumpeted lament the fateful
morning Olivier bicycles by his place on the way to Grandmother’s.
For now, though, the camera slowly picks him up safely playing with sister
Nadine elsewhere in the field. Leading the play, Nadine, who is older,
conjures a fantasy of alien intrusion that she and her brother must guard
against. Of course, the real danger to them both is much closer to
home. Nadine crushes a beetle—a show of force, invincibility.
As Marcel pedals through, she raises to her eye a tube and makes a noise
that magically translates into a beebee that knocks Marcel onto the grass.
Undetected, the children giggle over his tumble. But it is Marcel
who will decisively end their childhoods. Their power over him is
illusory. It is adults who hold final power over them. Later,
“Olivier” relishes manipulating the Duvals, all the while unaware that
it is he who is helpless in their tightening grip.
Olivier`s disappearance
clarifies the painfulness of the Duvals’ lives. Their “powers,” mental
or imaginative, always come up short. Initially, Nadine believes
that she herself wished Olivier out of the family for being their mother’s
favorite; yet she cannot wish him back, even to relieve her own enormous
pain. All she can do with her “mind” is perform parlor tricks: topple
things; extinguish light bulbs. True, her initial guilt over Olivier`s
disappearance gives way to gladness over having her mother, now, to herself;
but her depth of love for her brother, which Holland is careful to show,
becomes a retroactive index of her pain over his loss. Her mother
can do even less to alter reality. Holding herself responsible
that Olivier left, because
she failed to provide him with a “normal” environment, she is haunted by
his image. After the boy’s “return,” when Nadine abruptly exits while
she and Elizabeth are quarreling, through the outside door, flung open,
Elizabeth “sees” her nine-year-old happily at play on a backyard swing,
and she “hears” his giggling. But the visitation charts their non-negotiable
separation; Olivier occupies a child`s world-of-his-own, which his mother
can “look at” but not enter. Even forging a continuity of identity
between the two Oliviers cannot restore her cherished child to her aching
arms.
But Elizabeth’s desire
for this, plainly, is what leads her to accept this other boy as her lost
son, despite the fact that he is missing Olivier`s round face, long eyelashes,
freckles. Each point of similarity she can find, such as the “new”
Olivier`s appendectomy scar, she clings to in defiance of the more considerable
evidence of dissimilarity. Serge joins her in this, but for another
reason as well; for this “return” of their son has meant the restoration
of their marriage following a separation caused by Elizabeth’s appropriation
of their loss as entirely her own—much as, previously, she had nurtured
a closeness with the child that effectively had shut his father out.
And why does Inspector Druot accept “Olivier” as Olivier, despite the physical
dissimilarities between the two boys, despite the fact that the correct
answers to his questions that “Olivier” provides—mostly, family names—the
teenager could have gleaned from the case folder lying open on the policeman’s
desk? Guilt. The boy’s disappearance had been his first case,
which in the absence of productive leads he had had to close--but only
after promising Elizabeth and Nadine that he would find their son and brother.
Having failed to do this, he must come up with “Olivier” no matter what.
Also, Druot’s career has stagnated under the stigma of this beginning failure
of his—a situation he is motivated to reverse.
Why, however, does the
boy himself say he is Olivier? Well, he really never does, although
he craftily says enough to let others believe what they want. When
interrogated, the boy is defensively glib. (From his eye movements
and body language, it’s clear he is afraid of a beating.) Of the
mother he is in Paris in search of, he says: “She is a Baltic empress.
She was dumped by the Emir of Kuwait. Now she’s a maid at the Swedish embassy.
Her father’s Scandinavian.” This cocky mixture of fairy-tale romance
and real-world degradation reminds of the childhood this “toilet hustler”
has been robbed of; its riches-to-rags reversal of a fairy tale, in fact,
implies a longing for childhood in one too steeped in a sordid world to
hold out much hope of regaining it. More: His search for his mother
suggests a specific fantasy that the teenager may be holding close to him.
Might he not dream of rescuing her from whatever brutal fate his sudden
departure from home may have provoked? When asked for her name, the
boy restores her to a pedestal by replying, “Greta Garbo.” His ambivalence
regarding her is simple to fathom, very painful to take in; he wants to
protect his mother, but he also wants her to have protected him and to
continue to do so—a crisis of confusion as to whether he is, or should
be, a grownup or a child. This is heartrending stuff.
The adolescent’s fierce
independence, though, kicks in to curb his pretense at being someone other
than he is. When he shifts tone to declare, I`m telling you the truth.
No kidding: My name is Sébastien Blanche[,] there is no doubt he
is being truthful. However, it isn`t the truth Druot is desirous
of. When Sébastien asks what will happen to him now, Druot,
instead of offering help to find the boy’s mother, presents three choices:
being returned to his miserable, ugly life, being sent to reform school,
or, if only he “admits” to being Olivier Druot, being sent home to an environment
whose protective warmth and happiness Druot greatly exaggerates.
In effect, Sébastien’s “choice” is made for him. Also, he
“confesses” to being Sébastien because he aches to please, which
he likely associates with not being hit or hurt. Later, he confesses
(again) to being Sébastien; this come after he exposes Marcel as
a child molester, in order to protect a boy littler than himself, and offers
a solution to the real Olivier’s disappearance. “Why did you pretend?”
Druot asks. Sébastien replies: “It`s what you wanted. It suited
everyone. To make you happy.”
By “becoming” Olivier,
Sébastien makes Elizabeth happiest of all. But when she takes
him “home” by train the scene is fraught with a sense of the emotional
danger he is being drawn into. Elizabeth rushes into their compartment
with enough sandwiches for a family picnic, all for “Olivier”—feeding as
a form of consuming. Already the boy is asleep by the window, utterly
passive, vulnerable. Elizabeth cannot resist; she sits beside him.
Fearing forgiveness isn’t possible, she pleads, “You’ll forgive me?”
(Later, she explains, “It isn’t blackmail—but if you disappear again, I
won`t be able to survive it.”) She starts to caress the boy’s cheek.
His nervous system revulses; asleep still, he throws up his hand at her.
Holland sharply cuts to the landscape fleeing, as if in terror, past the
train window. Sébastien’s fate seems sealed. He will
not be permitted not to be “Olivier.”
The one Duval who doesn’t
believe him, who isn’t willing to pretend that he is Olivier, is Nadine.
Since her brother’s disappearance and her father`s departure, she has had
her mother all to herself. Even if correct, then, her skepticism
about “Olivier” is as self-serving as everyone else’s acceptance of him
is. Her waking dream-world is disintegrating, revealing the extent
to which she, also, has been
crippled by “family.”
To be sure, Nadine is unusual (as a scene showing her, in bed, stroking
her pet lizard drives home), but she isn’t “her own person” as much as
she thinks she is; for she has been shaped by her mother’s obsessive attachment
to Olivier. This is why, although she dearly loved her brother, she
bullied him and wished him, literally, out of a family picture in the first
place. Now Nadine unreasonably expects Elizabeth to decline to have
sex with her husband for the sake of some unspoken pact of sisterhood between
mother and daughter. Like “Olivier,” then, Nadine is caught up in
a tangle of blurred family roles. Her making love with Sébastien
adds to this—although, for us, this humanizes her. In the midst of
his deception, it also exposes Sébastien’s essential honesty.
When Nadine (oddly) notes she hadn`t expected such pleasure from sex with
a man, Sébastien replies, “But I’m not a man—I’m a boy.” It
would seem that their having sex should keep Nadine fortified against accepting
Sébastien as her brother; but the incestuous implication doesn`t
deter, or apparently even faze, her. Now she believes Sébastien
is Olivier. It is as if “incest” has moved her to openness to the
possibility, perhaps as a rebuke to the whole idea of family. But
the actual point of revelation waits for the next day. Through the
window she sees “Olivier” merrily engaged in a “peeing contest” with Paul,
the neighborhood child he will later rescue from Marcel’s grip; this
is what Olivier and Marcel used to do, and “Olivier” is singing the same
song that they used to sing together. Nadine`s initial hold-out lends
credence to the idea that Olivier and “Olivier,” if not one and the same,
are somehow connected—this, the core of mystery contributing to the film’s
quality of elusiveness.
The film’s final scene
argues best for this mystical connection between the two boys. Immediately
preceding it, the dead child’s body is dug up in Marcel’s basement.
Only Olivier’s wristwatch is shown, its face missing, suggesting a stoppage
of time, to prepare us for a drift from reality to fantasy. Serge
faints; Nadine spits in Druot’s face; the screen goes black.
The last passage consists
of six shots. The first is the longest. Night: Nadine stares
out the window, presumably at Olivier, at play, in her mind’s eye.
The camera pans left, from Nadine`s reflection to her person—the effect
is that, somehow, we have passed through a looking-glass,—and proceeds
to follow her as she turns to serve her father coffee. Grim, he says:
“You got your truth. Is that what you wanted?” The camera dips to
Elizabeth, seated, looking stark, spent, almost in shock; behind her, Nadine
continues to walk screen-left across the room’s length and then, with a
turn, screen-left halfway across the room’s width, in advance of “Olivier,”
whose parallel walking, in an adjacent room, we see through an archway.
The camera proceeds left, passing a halted Nadine, to show “Olivier”
entering through another
archway and, before penetrating the room, smiling at Serge, from whose
face, transformed, all care seems to have fallen away. Thus this
single fluid, intricately choreographed camera movement creates an invisible
thread connecting all the family members, including “Olivier” and, at the
outset, by implication, the actual Olivier. We are about to reach
a cut, concluding this extraordinary first shot.
Rather than fluid and
extensive, the next shots are short, static. The cut beginning the
second shot of the sequence occurs when “Olivier” sits down beside Elizabeth,
who is, as she has been before, in a trance. (This reverses the shot,
on the train, where Elizabeth sits beside the sleeping, dreaming “Olivier.”)
As Olivier had done as a child, and “Olivier” except for somehow “being”
him could not have known, “Olivier” waves his hand in front of Elizabeth’s
face, saying, as another cut brings us a closeup of her face, “Back to
Earth, Mom; I’m here.” And, just like six years earlier, this snaps
Elizabeth to. Like Serge’s, her torment dissolves. Smiling,
she turns to “Olivier” and says: “Olivier. You’re here?” Cut three;
shot four is a closeup of the boy`s tearfully smiling face. Elizabeth
continues: “You came back?” Cut four; shot five is a closeup of Elizabeth’s
reciprocally tearfully smiling face. One more cut delivers the final
shot, mysterious, sad, haunting: through the window, amidst blowing rain,
the vacant swing. “Olivier,” the replacement, must forever remain
an index of inconsolable loss.
This closing, desolate
shot sweeps away whatever, indoors, might be mistaken for a happy family
reconstitution. Rather, what has tragically occurred indoors, at
least on one level, is the completed projection upon Sébastien of
Olivier. To be sure, Sébastien himself chose to return to
the Duvals. However, he was really driven back by a combination of
guilt, confusion and compassion. However we come to make them, though,
our choices have psychological consequences. Tactfully, Holland declined
to pursue these in her powerful Europa Europa, which passes over the mental
and spiritual costs for Perel, not only of denying his Jewishness for survival`s
sake, but of masquerading as one of the killers committed to destroying
Jewry. By contrast, Olivier Olivier fully intimates the toll of its
aftermath. For Sébastien, there is neither freedom nor redemption;
there is no Israel where he can start afresh. For this boy ends as
a sacrifice to stabilizing the Duvals. His mystic connection to their
son clears the pathway to the altar, where the boy Sébastien is
as lost to himself as his actual mother is lost to him. All loss,
Holland is saying, is permanent. The empty swing evokes Olivier’s
fate and, it turns out, Sébastien’s.
Holland has made an authentic
film, one where each character, even Marcel, is probed, and found to be
behaviorally rich and complex. Holland is analytical; she has no
interest whatsoever in providing a comic strip of victims and villains.
She embraces the humanity of her characters in order to embrace her own
humanity.
Her sterling trilogy about
childhood suffering, begun with Europa Europa, ended with The Secret Garden
(1993), based on Frances Hodgson Burnett’s children`s story. Another
magnificent piece of work, this (somewhat exacting) film may be Holland’s
most persuasive achievement to date. It is another gripping portrait
of children enslaved in any number of ways by the adults who should be
nurturing and protecting them; and, rousingly, it leads, not to devastation,
but to a liberation of spirit, for which Holland devises a visual metaphor
nearly as stunning as the springtime breakup of river ice that images revolution’s
triumph over the czarist regime in Vsevolod Pudovkin’s masterpiece, Mother
(1926). For Holland uses time-lapse photography to capture a bursting
into the sunlight of a dormant garden`s rebirth—stuff I remember from school
science class films, here given fresh meaning and moral depth, to create
one of the most moving passages in all of cinema. Since then, Holland
has had Leonardo DiCaprio to contend with, playing Rimbaud no less, in
an unpleasant Total Eclipse (1995); but she recouped with a fine Washington
Square (1997), magnificently acted by Jennifer Jason Leigh.
Indeed, Holland directs
actors wonderfully well. The acting in Olivier Olivier, in fact,
is nothing short of perfect. Brigitte Rouan and François Cluzet
as Elizabeth and Serge Duval, and Frédéric Quiring as Marcel,
are all excellent. Three of the other cast members are, however,
superb. Jean-François Stévenin, a director himself,
is brilliant as Druot, who, unaware of his psychological kinship with Marcel,
seems to be turning away from himself when, in disgust, he turns away from
Marcel after the digging up of the dead child. Marina Golovine, as
the six-year-later Nadine, and Grégoire Colin, who plays Sébastien,
are memorable, too. Of course, in the eight years since his exquisitely
sensitive performing in this film, Colin, now in his mid-twenties, has
become one of the world’s great actors (Before the Rain, Nenette et Boni,
The Dreamlife of Angels, Beau Travail). This adds an unexpected note
of pleasure to Holland’s film, for providing us in America with our first
long look at Colin’s amazing talent, and his chiseled face and haunted
eyes. Sébastien’s eyes.
Dennis
Grunes |
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