Anne
Trister Movie Review:
Anne
Trister is a small Quebec film, directed by Leà Pool (Movements
of Desire) in 1986. This is a film of somewhat less-than-profound
aims, but interesting in a way due to its simple charms.
Anne
is a artist who has just suffered from the death of her
father, and to get away from her former life for awhile,
she leaves her Switzerland home, and her recording engineer
boyfriend, and moves to Quebec. While there, she also runs
into an old friend of her father`s, who gives her a decent
place to stay at a neighbour`s house, and also gives her
an abandoned building to work on her art.
The
woman she stays with is Alix, a child psychiatrist. The
two get along smashingly, but a peculiar thing begins to
happen. Anne clearly is falling in love with Alix. It's
peculiar because the script doesn`t make a big show out
of it. This is not one of those painfully self-conscious
stories of people "coming out of the closet", and saying
how great it is to be gay, and other such nonsense, but,
rather, it just simply happens. There is a nice scene showing
how Alix still attempts a sense of decorum even after Anne
goes so boldly as to kiss her before she leaves. It`s quiet,
and doesn`t attempt to create a painfully melodramatic moment.
There
is also a subplot involving Alix and one of her child patients,
a girl named Sarah. This kid has an intense demeanour and
is clearly disturbed in a number of ways. While it is unclear
why she is behaving this way, you will understand that whatever
it was, it has left a complex array of problems in its wake,
and numerous scenes of "acting out" with the psychiatrist.
The most chilling of these situations is when Sarah plays
a "game" in which Alix is a mean mommy. Sarah then ties
Alix up, covers her mouth with tape, and proceeds to scream
out painful words and obscenities.
All
of these scenes are dark and fascinating, and worthy of
a movie of its own. That`s why I was very curious as to
why they were included in this movie, presumably
about Anne. Sarah is interesting to watch, but we don`t
know a lot about her. We can guess as to why, especially
during the scene I have just described, she has all these
problems. But since we don`t get much information, we can
become a bit lost.
But
since my brain works in mysterious ways, I couldn`t help
but to arbitrarily search for a purpose for these scenes.
And the hypothesis I attempted approaching was the possibility
of parallels between Anne and Sarah. And, strangely enough,
I might have found them. It all started with the editing.
There was a moment when I was lead to believe I was watching
a flashback to Anne`s youth. But it actually was our first
sight of Sarah, on a video Alix is examining. And there
are other moments where the editing and the writing suggest
some kind of relationship between the adult and the child.
Alix tells Anne of the first time Sarah asked for help:
"She said 'I have no family and I break things'" And we
see Anne in a more subdued version of that predicament,
as she becomes frustrated with her art, and feels devoid
of family. In Anne`s case, however, Anne still has a mother,
yet behaves as if she is no longer part of her life.
Possibly,
the parallel lies in the fact Alix saves both these people
from total despair. Alix allows Sarah to no longer feel
hostile to the adult, confusing world, and also allows Anne
to express her own problems, and loneliness, and becomes
the true friend she has been looking for.
The
final thing I must say is that the soundtrack contains some
of the most cheesiest synth music ever heard in an "art
film". Only in the 80's would a movie get away with such
tacky rhythms. The odd thing about it, strangely enough,
is that the music removes the potential pretentiousness
and just gives you a story. Granted, it's an incomplete,
unsure script, but it`s a nice little movie to waste 90
minutes with, at any rate.
David
Macdonald
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