Elle (2016)

Paul Verhoeven (Basic Instinct, Total RecallElle opens with a scene that even the most jaded person would find difficult to watch. Whenever we see a rape scene on the big screen, we are mortified. Rape is a crime we abhor and, next to murder, the one we find most unacceptable in society. To start a movie with a brutal rape sets the immediate somber tone of the movie and, ironically, a tone that we often get away from. There are so many genres in this French-subtitled film. It can be classified as drama, romance, suspense, thriller, revenge, mystery, and even comedy. I’d be lying if I said I understood every component of this movie without having to do some research for it afterward. The older gentleman didn’t have that problem and began clapping as we rolled to the credits. I saw this film because Isabelle Huppert (Things to Come, Amour) is a lock for a Best Actress Academy Award nomination after winning a Golden Globe. I think she has a solid chance to win. Natalie Portman (Jackie) and Emma Stone (La La Land) are her only real competition.

I was uncertain how I would lean at the time of this writing. I wasn’t the biggest fan of Jackie, but Natalie Portman did nail the role perfectly. It was dark and dreary, and I wasn’t sure the movie was needed. Elle was fresh and original, and while the content was dark, Huppert gives a career-defining performance as Michele, a woman who refuses to show any reactionary human emotion for the events she is put through. If someone forced me to make a pick today, I would say that my heart says Huppert, but my mind says Portman. It would not be unprecedented for an actress to win cinema’s top prize. There have been two winners in the past decade (Marion Cotillard – La Vie en Rose and Penelope Cruz – Vicky Cristina Barcelona) and several other nominations, including two in the past four years. And Portman already has her Oscar for Lead Actress (2010’s Black Swan). While Huppert might be an unknown commodity in the Western Hemisphere, she has been one of the most revered actresses in Europe for the past 40 years.

Oh, Verhoeven and Huppert, what have you done to me? I went into this film knowing nothing about it other than that it was French, and Huppert was likely to get an Oscar nomination. She may now be the frontrunner after winning a Golden Globe. There was only one theater playing this movie in my area. It’s safe to say that I went further to watch this movie than I have seen any movie before. I wanted to see it before the Oscar nominations were released, and driving 20 miles out was the only way I would secure that chance. Based on reading a three-line synopsis, I knew that this wasn’t going to be a light-hearted comedy, and I was ready for something heavy. But I was entirely unprepared for what I had seen. As the movie ended, I sat in my chair wholly complexed while an older gentleman (who had also attended the movie by himself) clapped. I’ve been to movies before where you expect the audience to clap at the end. I went to two in a row this year where the audience clapped (ArrivalHacksaw Ridge).

But as this man clapped, I wondered what the other ten patrons in the theater and I were missing. I didn’t care about the other ten people at all. I only wondered about what I was missing. But I just attributed it to being one of those artsy movies that went over my head. Even if I didn’t completely understand the movie, I could still appreciate an excellent performance. But, man, this movie would not get out of my mind. I replayed each scene in my head. I thought of how each character contributed to the overall plot. And as I began putting the pieces together, I concluded that this film is a masterpiece. And even as I reflect on what I believe was the sequence of all events in this film, I could easily be talked out of it.

elle movie still

As mentioned, the film opens with Michele being raped by a masked assailant. We hear the rape happening, but we don’t see it. The way that Verhoeven sets up the movie’s start makes us wonder if we are hearing consensual sex versus something more. When we do visually see the scene, it is in the middle of the rape. The assailant, covered head to toe in balaclava garb, has just orgasmed. We see the aftereffects as he stands and wipes some blood off his hip as his victim lies motionless on the hardwood ground of her living room. He had broken in through the back door to Michele’s home, which is actually in a fairly populated part of Paris. And though we don’t see any violence in this scene, we see bruises on her face that she attributes to falling off her bike.

I would never make light of rape, and while the film revolves around Elle’s reaction to this horrendous event, the focus is not on the effect that the rape has on her but instead on how she deals with it. It’s an event that would traumatize anyone, and people will act differently. But there seems to be something a little off when Michele calmly locks the back door and cleans up some broken ceramic glass before ordering delivery food moments later. Later, she takes a bubble bath, where she casually wipes away the blood that rises to the foamy service in the area between her legs and returns to work the next day as if nothing had happened. I would never say that somebody mishandles a nightmarish situation like this. It seemed odd that she almost dismissed it as if nothing had happened. There was no emotion. There was no dread. There was no panic. There was no anger. There was just a sense of not really acceptance, but one of which she is saying, “Ok. This has happened. Where do I go from here?” When she finally does open up about the rape, it is to a trio of friends at a dinner on the town, and told her story in between when they ordered and when these drinks were brought to the table. Then, she kindly moves on to another topic.

Michele returns to work the day after the attack. There was no report to local authorities. Her job, ironically, is the Chief Executive Officer of a successful video game label that specializes in brutal medieval fantasy designed to elicit sexual arousal. Her team, which includes best friend Anna (Anne Consigny), the aggressive, hotshot lead developer Kurt (Lucas Prisor), young entry-level programmer Kevin (Arthur Mazet), and a dozen or so others, is not exactly one cohesive unit. Already behind schedule, the team struggles with the decisions it needs to make. Michele demands more challenging visuals, shouting at one point, “The orgasmic convulsions are way too timid!” Kurt complains about the game controller, believing that it doesn’t matter how convoluted the interface is, saying it won’t matter if game players are frustrated with being unable to move their character around on the screen. Most of the rest of the team is worried about keeping their jobs, knowing that they are already so far past their production deadline that they wonder if their vendor will scrap the project altogether. 

Outside of Anna and Kevin, her team despises Michele. And, perhaps, rightfully so. She is ruthless. She is demanding. She doesn’t ever take the time to thank her employees. She’s one of those bosses where enough is never enough. And, though you don’t notice it at the time, she rarely smiles during this movie, and the times that she does seem almost rehearsed and fake. And those close to her know it. And so maybe it becomes logical for her to think that her assailant could have been any of the men working on her team. So, add about ten people to the list of whodunit right away, with Kurt, perhaps, the leading culprit.

Other players in this character-rich drama include Anna’s husband, Robert (Christian Berkel); Michele’s ex-husband, Richard (Charles Berling); Richard’s new, younger girlfriend, Helene (Vimala Pons); Michele’s mother, Irene (Judith Magre), Michele’s adult, but inept son Vincent (Jonas Bloquet), and Vincent’s girlfriend Josie (Alice Isaaz), along with their newborn baby. Finally, the kind neighbors live across the street with their husband, Patrick (Laurent Lafitte), and wife, Rebecca (Virginie Efira).

Each plays an integral part here. Interestingly, these are the people closest to Michele, yet it’s hard to tell how much she cares about any of them. Then there is the backstory of her oppressively religious father, who, some 40 years before this film, went crazy and mass murdered a group of children. Michele was caught in the television newsfeed at the time. She has forever been associated with her father for this heinous act. Why she never moved away is neither here nor there. However, we can infer that Michele was obviously traumatized by this event and never adequately dealt with trauma.

Without giving too much away, we do learn of Michele’s assailant reasonably before we might expect to. It’s here that the movie takes an unexpected turn as we see more into the psyche of Michele and whatever you want to call her perversions, masochism, self-loathing, and guilt. There is something here that leads to the most profound character study of any character you’ll see on film this year (sorry, Casey Affleck, but we understand how your character in Manchester by the Sea got to be the way he did) and might be the key in landing Huppert the Oscar. She’s in every scene in this movie, so we see her interactions with those around her. But we never understand her.

elle movie still

When we think we do, we realize we don’t at all. She’s got a no-holds-barred approach. She’ll tell you exactly what it is she’s thinking. And it seems she only fears getting attacked again, but even with that, there might be more than meets the eye. While at first, it looks like she’s using the other people as pawns in the movie, by the end, the audience is being played. It’s not that there are so many twists and turns here; it’s just one turn that slowly plays out and one that we surely can’t and don’t want to believe. But, again, we don’t know the complete history of this character. We know her in the present and know that something awful happened 40 years prior.

We don’t know what happened in the middle other than she worked her way up the corporate ladder in her professional life and had a child with her husband, who she divorced in her personal life. She likes to control the situation most of the time. But maybe she has been in control too much and finds that not being in control brings out something new in her. It truly is in the eye of the beholder because, as I mentioned, I can see this movie through many different lenses. I may need to read French-Armenian writer Philippe Djian’s award-winning 2012 novel to better understand his intention with Michele.

Huppert’s characterization of Michele is reason enough to see the movie. There is no more compelling character in cinema this year. Everything she says and every non-verbal cue has a multitude of implications. And the way that she does it is so unassuming that you’d probably have to watch this movie a handful of times to catch everything. But there is far more to this movie beyond Huppert. The other characters are pivotal to the film’s success, and there might not be one you like by its conclusion, including its protagonist. And to accomplish this, you need a quality director behind the camera. And you have this with Verhoeven, who has made one movie in the last 17 years and has tackled a project utterly different than Total Recall, RoboCop, Black Book, Hollow Man, Starship Troopers, Showgirls, and Basic Instinct, pretty movies all of us have heard of. And I didn’t even look into the part of him going from American movies to a French one. Perhaps he’s bilingual? Perhaps not. In any case, I don’t know if I’ve seen such a shift in the type of movie a director was known for to one so different. That he isn’t a consideration for an Oscar nomination is shocking.

As the movie progresses, Michele becomes challenging to root for. She is imperfect, but her depth is tremendous, and her motives are not always understood. This movie is haunting at the beginning and the end, but in a completely different way.

Plot 10/10
Character Development 10/10
Character Chemistry 9/10
Acting 9.5/10
Screenplay 10/10
Directing 9.5/10
Cinematography 9/10
Sound 10/10
Hook and Reel 10/10
Universal Relevance 9/10
96%

A

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