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Film noir is a genre
generally dating from mid-twentieth century Hollywood, films about crime and passion and
evil-doing whose characters (good and bad) are suffused with cynicism. There's a Gothic
quality to the look of these films--theatrical, strongly contrasted lighting, dingy
interiors, nighttime more than day--and an air of decay, of corruption and violence
lurking in the shadows. The Maltese Falcon is an example of quality within the genre as
are The Big Heat and Double Indemnity. Noir remains in constant play, not
only in American movies (L.A.
Confidential, The Man
Who Wasn't There) but in foreign films as well; the French seem particularly
drawn to it (Breathless, Rififi).
Audiences respond to these films because, like horror films and
science fiction, it gives them a walk on the wild side without leaving the comfort and
security of their seats in the theater. In the anything-goes, nothing-to-lose world of noir
there is, perhaps, a release for ordinary folks whose lives of petty transgressions pale
next to the disillusioned amorality of noir.
Read My Lips, from director Jacques Audiard (A Self-Made Hero), starts without a particularly noir
tone, but one of its strategies is to build a crescendo of obliquity. By the time
it's over, it's as black as coal on a moonless night.
What particularly distinguishes Read My Lips (and there's a
lot to admire here) is its depth of motivation and character development, particularly in
its main character, Carla Bhem (Emmanuelle Devos). Carla, even with a hearing aid, is near
deaf and she's ordinary looking as well. She works as a secretary in a construction
firm where her more menial tasks are occasionally leavened with some management
responsibilities. She has the experience and skill for the latter, but is held down by
manipulative actions of the (all male) project managers who snigger about her when they
think she can't hear them. What they don't know is that she can read lips. Audiard uses
the sound track from time to time to project the audience into Carla's auditory
position--water running in a scene, for example, but no sound of it on the soundtrack. He
also wryly shows the advantages--turn off the hearing aid around crying babies and in loud
discos.
Carla also listens to her girlfriend rhapsodize about her sexual
escapades which heightens her unfulfilled needs, both physical and emotional. Audiard
takes his time building the circumstances of Carla's life, establishing the texture of her
neediness, aided immeasurably by Devos' subtle performance. She gets under the skin of
Carla; her reaction to each unfolding event seems psychologically consistent and rings
true. So the audience has been prepared when the boss authorizes her to hire an assistant
and she hires Paul (Vincent Cassel), an utterly inappropriate just-paroled ex-con. He's a
liar, he can't type, he's scroungy, but he generates steamy sexual heat.
From there, their lives start to intertwine and the malfeasance begins
in earnest--she in response to the double-dealers at her job, he in response to an ever
deeper involvement with a mobster to whom he is debt. She also repudiates his initial and
crude sexual advance, not from lack of wanting, but for wanting it right. Carla knows all
too well what it is like to be treated as an object.
There are subplots both on the office side and on the mob side, but
they are all firmly connected to the film's theme, adding to motivation and to this bleak
landscape of unprincipled selfishness, Audiard (who also co-wrote the screenplay)
doesn't waste a frame; each has something to add to the total picture and each scene stops
when it has accomplished its purpose, unusual discipline in this era of director's bloat.
Read My Lips raises the question: when they're all bad
guys, who are you gonna root for? There's no one to root for here, but the development of
the relationship between Carla and Paul is wonderfully complex and revealing. They're a
little too dark to be Robin Hoods, though their victims all deserve what they get. More
aptly, they're a Bonnie and Clyde for an existential age. For all that they get sucked up
into a whorl of crookedness and violence, Paul gives Carla something that no one else
has--trust and respect for her ability to accomplish a job. Working together under
pressure, she is established (in his eyes and her own) as a real person, a person of
value, and they become a team. From the sewer of criminality, an orchid of romance blooms.
- Arthur Lazere