
By
the time Philippe Garrel made "Night Wind" he was no longer the young
turk who made "The Virgin's Bed", (or unmade it as some wags might say).
Here he shot in colour and in widescreen and had a mature but still
gorgeous Catherine Deneuve as his leading lady. Otherwise, it was mostly
business as usual. What begins as a typically Garellian study of
adultery, concentrating on the mundane rather than the erotic, (sex is
conspicuously absent in this movie), soon shifts gear, literally as well
as figuratively, and becomes a road-movie and Garrel's brilliant use of
colour gives his film a much richer texture than we have come
to expect.

Of course, the film must also be viewed as having
large elements of autobiography in the mix. The central character Paul,
(Xavier Beauvois), is, for most of the time, a passenger in the Porsche
driven by Serge, (Daniel Duval), through Italy, France and Germany.
Serge is an old revolutionary from the Paris of '68, and from the
conversations they have about the good old bad old days you can easily
discern the young Garrel. The older Serge may be the Garrel of the
present as the younger Paul is the Garrel of the past and Garrel the
filmmaker does not make Paul an easy character to like. As the older
woman both men come to share Denueve is, of course, extraordinary and
both Beauvois and Duval are also very fine.

If the film appears
on the surface more conventional than we have come to expect from
Garrel, don't be fooled; those touristy views of Italy are only part of
the picture. As before, what interests Garrel is the existential angst
bubbling beneath the surface. Garrel certainly likes to suffer and have
his characters suffer so despite the luscious tone this is not always an
easy watch. At times it veers close to self-parody but that's a risk I
think Garrel was aware of and was prepared to take in a film that
overflows with talk, all of it intelligent and some of it profound. This
is the work of a truly major artist.
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