| This
intensely focused film from brothers Jean-Pierre and
Luc Dardenne (LA PROMESSE, ROSETTA) follows Olivier
(Olivier Gourmet), a man in mid-life working as a carpentry
instructor in a blue collar French suburb. By day he
teaches teenage boys how to work with wood. By night
he leads a drab, solitary, routine existence.
Olivier is a humble Everyman who could
easily go unnoticed. However, the jarring sounds of
his wood shop--sawing, hammering, slamming boards together--tell
a different story, and set the tone for this simple
but clearly dread-filled plotline.
The camera violates Olivier with its constantly
invasive, examining motion. It is behind his ears, up
his nose, under his chin, and peering down the collar
of his shirt. And as the film rolls, it becomes increasingly
evident that Olivier is nervous, edgy, even seething
about something deep inside. He develops a fascination
with one of the boys in his class and nervously pursues
the boy, offering him friendship and advice with a frightening
lack of affection. Through forced spurts of dialogue
and unexplained actions, Olivier's connection to the
boy is slowly and painfully revealed. THE SON
meditates on its own static tension, turning suspense
into a gripping plotline all its own.
Gourmet's performance is pointed and
perfect, and it earned the Best Actor award at the Cannes
Film Festival in 2002.
"It combines a fresh and
exciting style with stunning performances and that rarity
in current film, a deeply humanistic story." -
David Sterrit/ Christian Science Monitor
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