The
Unknown Girl *** ½ / *****
Directed
by: Jean-Pierre
& Luc Dardenne.
Written
by: Jean-Pierre
& Luc Dardenne.
Starring:
Adèle
Haenel (Jenny Davin), Olivier Bonnaud (Julien), Jérémie Renier (Bryan's father),
Louka Minnella (Bryan), Christelle Cornil (Bryan's mother), Nadège Ouedraogo (Cashier
at the cybercafé), Olivier Gourmet (Lambert's son), Pierre Sumkay (Monsieur
Lambert), Yves Larec (Doctor Habran), Ben Hamidou (Inspector Ben Mahmoud), Laurent
Caron (Inspector Bercaro).
There are few directors who can
claim to be as consistently good for as long a period as time as the Dardennes
have. For the last 20 years, they’ve produced a film every three years or so,
and almost all of them have been humane and touching – looking at complicated,
real world morality, and finding universal truths. They’ve won the Palme D’or
twice (for Rosetta and L’enfant), and three of their other films have also won
prizes at Cannes. It’s easy to take the brothers for granted, since they seem
to do what they do with ease. Their latest, The Unknown Girl, is a slight
disappointment – but mainly because it doesn’t reach the usual high quality.
That doesn’t mean the film is bad – far from it – it’s just doesn’t have the
same impact as films like Two Days, One Night or The Son. It doesn’t even quite
reach the levels of previous “lesser” Dardennes like The Kid with the Bike or
Lorna’s Silence – which I felt both slowly built to something, so you didn’t quite
notice how deeply touching they were until they ended. Not coincidentally, The
Unknown Girl is also the most plot heavy Dardenne film – and that is where they
fall done the most here. Normally, their films have a very simple premise, and
then observe their lead characters as they navigate through the moral quandary.
Here, plotting is necessary, and it’s awkward. Also, by the end, you wonder the
same thing you do in many Hollywood films – if this film is supposed to be a
call to action to have more compassion for the poor or immigrants or people of
color, why does it star a white woman in the lead role? Still, it’s a testament
to the Dardennes skill – and that of lead actress Adele Haenel that these flaws
don’t sink the film.
In the film, Haenel stars as Jenny
Davin – a young, promising Doctor, who has just accepted a major position, and
a prestigious facility that will make her career. She will start the job the
next week, and as a result, she will be leaving the small practice she took
over from an aging doctor a few more before – she was only ever meant to be
there on a transitional basis, but most of the patients are poor, and haven’t gotten
new doctors yet. One night, a few minutes after closing, there is a repeated
ringing at the office’s doorbell – Jenny’s intern wants to open up and see who
it is, Jenny doesn’t want to. The hours are over, and she wants to go home –
she’s pretty much done with the practice anyway. It’s a mistake she’ll come to
regret the following day when the police show up and want to see the security
footage from her office door – and when they do, they discover that the
murdered girl they just found was the same girl who rang Jenny’s bell. Had she
answered, that woman may very well still be alive. Worse, the police cannot
identify the girl – they know she was young, black, and immigrant and a likely
a prostitute, but don’t know much else. Jenny becomes obsessed with finding out
who she was – and what happened to her. And as a result, she turns her life
upside down.
As a mystery, The Unknown Girl
leaves a lot to be desired. Jenny’s detective work seems to basically be
showing a picture of the girl to everyone she meets, and she has a remarkably
high rate of finding people who recognize her. One person leads to the next
clue, and so on – almost Law & Order style. You get the sense that the
Dardennes may be trying to play with you a little bit – they cast two of their
favorite actors – Olivier Gourmet and Jeremie Renier – in roles seemingly too
small for actors of their caliber, so one of them has to be involved, right? (I
won’t reveal how the plot plays out – although after a while, you’ll know – the
movie doesn’t really leave too many open possibilities).
The movie actually works best
when it abandons its plot – in the regular scenes where Jenny interacts with
her patients, and tries to help them solve their problems – both medical and
not. That is when the film appears more like a Dardenne movie. What makes it
worse, is that I can the Dardennes making a great movie about a doctor like
Jenny choosing between helping her older, poor patient abandoned by the system,
and taking the new, shinier, more prestigious job. That’s all relegated to the
background in The Unknown Girl at the service of a more, by-the-numbers
mystery. In the end, you do kind of see why the Dardennes felt they needed the
missing girl story – there are two powerful, extended scenes – one between
Jenny and the suspect, and another between Jenny and a family member of the
victim – which really are excellent as actor’s showcases, and are emotionally
satisfying. They are also, it must be said, the kind of anti-thesis to much of
what makes Dardennes movies so powerful – because they rarely resort to those
types of scenes.
The Unknown Girl is still a fine
film – I wonder if it will play better on a second viewing, when I would be
free of expecting something more similar to what the Dardennes have done
before, and can enjoy this movie more on its own terms. You really cannot be
mad at a movie for not being what you want it to be. Yet, the reason why the
Dardennes became the giants of world cinema they are is because they make more
thoughtful, and less clichéd than The Unknown Girl.
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