
Guillaume Brac came to filmmaking relatively late in life in that he didn’t study movies as an undergraduate (he went to business school). Consequently, his work has always betrayed a cautious hesitancy with regard to form and style. In his fiction films he comes across as a more subdued Eric Rohmer, leaning heavily on narrative realism and a lot of dialogue. He specializes in the extended human interaction, often while on summer vacation, which is why his latest work, a documentary that’s only a little over an hour in length, focuses on a group of high school students at a boarding school in the Alpine French town of Die as they finish up their last year. All the subjects are anxious about the future and hesitant to leave their friends behind as summer approaches and they enter the world on their own terms. Brac is the perfect fly-on-the-wall observer and captures these young people’s conversations with bracing candor.
For some reason, Brac only interviews the female students, though the school is coed. Many of these girls are from single-parent backgrounds. For them living away from home has turned out to be something of a comfort, and so they are afraid to leave friends who have become their family in all but name. Nours, whose divorced parents raised her on a boat as it traveled the world, says she already feels abandoned a second time as her classmates plan for college. “My father couldn’t handle being a parent,” she says, “so I always felt like a burden.” Jeanne’s own existential crisis is almost anti-natalist, as she assumes she was the product of an unplanned pregnancy. “My parents were educated,” she says, “so why did they decide to have me?”; as if intelligent people would, left to their own devices, not bring children into this terrible world. Diane is still trying to get over losing her sister at a young age, a trauma she’s only learned to confront by discussing her most personal thoughts with the people she met at school. Brac gives us the detailed psychological situation of these girls so that we can draw our own conclusions about their generation, which comes across as thoughtful, intelligent, and completely cognizant of how dangerous the world has become since their parents were their age. This quality is especially apparent in the boys who drift in and out of the frame, especially the dreadlocked, heavily pierced Louison, who speaks insightfully about the hazards of child-rearing and the pointlessness of capitalist striving.
Brac’s photography is invariably gorgeous, taking advantage of Die’s close proximity to mountains, rivers, and forests, where many of these conversations take place. Even in English class, the students discuss heavy philosophical subjects colloquially and clearly, all in a second language. Brac avoids adults as much as possible, and when a figure of authority does enter the picture their purpose seems to be to reinforce our perception that we would be much better off if these young people were in charge of the world right now, regardless of their emotional vulnerability and uncertain understanding of human relationships. I’m much older than their parents, and I felt privileged to be in their presence.
In French and English. Now playing in Tokyo at Eurospace Shibuya (03-3461-0211).
So Long home page in Japanese
photo (c) bathysphere productions 2024












