Dispatches from Cannes: Jacques Audiard Tackles The Plight of A Tamil Warrier

Dispatches from Cannes: Jacques Audiard Tackles The Plight of A Tamil Warrier
The French director returns to his theme of the trials of survival. —

Jacques Audiard is best known for telling the watchful stories of men in knife-edge situations, whether they’re dodging the pull of the criminal world like Romain Duris in The Beat That My Heart Skipped or learning to survive in prison like Tahar Rahim in A Prophet. Dheepan begins its story with the sight of  a truck being loaded with bodies in the dusty midst of the Tamil war-zone in Sri Lanka. Shortly thereafter, a desperate woman grabs a ‘husband’ and a ‘daughter’ before making a successful plea for a new collective identity. The three are then smuggled across the water to France where they live as a family in a tenement block dominated by gang activity.

Audiard does his best work in the first hour, showing the quiet determination of his characters to make it in this new and precarious social set-up. The man, Dheepan (Jesuthasan Antonythasan), woman, Yalani (Kalieaswari Srinivasan) and child, Illayaal (Claudine Vinasithamby) are juggling past trauma with the unnatural task of getting to know each other in a demanding and intimate situation. Nicolas Jaar’s electronic score is ambient yet menacing and the actors emit guarded depth creating an atmosphere that grips.

Dheepan is given a job as a caretaker by a fixer and Yalani is sent to work for the uncle of the local gangland boss (Vincent Rottiers). Audiard avoids the temptation of making gang characters the Villains Who Ruin Everything. Indeed Yalani and Brahim drum up a tentative chemistry that shows cross-cultural respect rather than the more the more cinematically typical, vile racism. The third act is a victim of the rest of the film’s success in that it doesn’t sustain the imagination of what has gone before. The opening double stretch is so powerful that it makes Dheepan a valuable film, irrespective of its incomplete narrative state.

Read out sister magazine, LWLies’ review of Dheepan here.

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