Pola
X (1999) – Leos Carax.

Leo
Carax's vibrant, consistently intriguing, exquisitely French drama
presents an effete, greatly privileged young author Pierre (Guillaume
Depardieu), who dramatically rejects his bourgeois status, absconding
to the city with Isabelle (Yekaterina Golubeva)a breathlessly
beautiful, desperately pale, itinerant woman who claims to be his
estranged sister. Pierre's urge to escape his overtly tactile,
smothering older sister (Catherine Deneuve), and plainly neurotic
fiance Lucie (Delphine Chulliot) is not only relatable, I believe it
is nigh on essential, otherwise he would inevitably be absorbed into
the vastly indolent corpus of the ruling elite. Like all works of
anguished existentialist cinema, a series of tragedies fatefully
befall the two isolated, increasingly intimate protagonists. The
performances are really rather lovely, and Carax's visually compelling
narrative proves cinematic, rather than literary, which is so often
usually the case with French cinema.

The
increasingly frantic final act, is, for me, absolutely compelling,
the arrival of the fragile, waif-like Lucie certainly provides for a
classically tragic ménage a trois. While I can see why many would
find tousle-haired, neo-beatnik Pierre a spoiled, dilettantish
character, perhaps, even a little vapid, I believe his drive to write
something truly exemplary is quite genuine. His vagabond existence in
this reclaimed industrial squat is not only sustaining, but may
provide the galvanizing inspiration he previously lacked. Cinema, at its very
best, should provide ambiguities, make space for ambivalence, thereby
allowing the viewer to inform his, or her own views on the
protagonists inner motivations, good, bad, or ugly! Tragic, sensual,
hysteric, visually sumptuous, and surprisingly humane, Leos Carax's divinely immersive drama was a film I was more than happy to experience again!