Les affamés *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Robin Aubert.
Written by: Robin Aubert.
Starring: Marc-André Grondin
(Bonin), Monia Chokri (Tania), Charlotte St-Martin (Zoé), Micheline Lanctôt
(Pauline), Marie-Ginette Guay (Thérèse), Brigitte Poupart (Céline), Édouard
Tremblay-Grenier (Ti-Cul), Luc Proulx (Réal), Didier Lucien (Vézina), Robert
Brouillette (Paco), Martin Héroux (Demers), Patrick Hivon (Race driver).
I
am constantly surprised by how durable the zombie genre is – how new directors
find new ways of exploring the genre, and finding new notes to hit. I don’t necessarily
think that Robin Aubert’s Les Affames (The Ravenous) is completely new or
different, but I do think he is trying something interesting with the film that
marks it as different from most of the Night of the Living Dead (or now The
Walking Dead) clones out there.
The
film takes place in the Northern Quebec countryside, and spends a long time
bringing together its cast of characters. When the film opens, the zombie
apocalypse has already began, and the film makes no effort to try and explain
what happened or why. It also doesn’t waste any time explaining the “rules” of
this particular zombie outbreak, because they are the same as every other one
we’ve seen in the past 50 years – you get bit, you’re turning into a zombie, it’s
only a matter of time.
There
are a few things that make the zombies in Aubert’s film different from most.
Like all right minded people out there, he knows zombies move slowly, but here
they are quite the unthinking, unfeeling killing machines we have normally
seen. There is something about them that remains at least somewhat human – when
you kill them, they do in fact cry out in pain, which is somewhat different.
They also seem to cling to some semblance of their former lives – one of the
most haunting moments comes with the realization that they are building some
kind of shrine out of their old belongings – chairs, toys, etc. They may no
longer be “human” – but what are they?
Gradually
we get to know the characters – including self-confessed nerd Bonin (Marc-Andre
Grondin), who is somewhat lonely and regretful that he never had a family of
his own in his life – aside from his mother, who is still around. There is
Tania (Monia Chokri), who has found her way to this small town, clinging to her
accordion – the one thing she has from her old life. The two form some sort of
weird family unit along with little Zoe – an orphan who is there as well. There
are more of course – a business woman realizing she has lived her life the way
she was meant to, not the way she wanted, and a strange pair – an older man,
and teenage boy, both of whom made the perhaps fatal flaw of not killing their
turned families soon enough.
As
with all zombie stories, Aubert is more interested in the living than the
living dead – and using the genre to explore that. The characters in Les
Affames are more downbeat and introspective than most. They do eventually
decide to try and leave the ravaged small town countryside for the city –
reckoning that the government would be active there (just one of many, small
moments that imply a particular hostility between rural and urban areas in
Quebec in particular – but also there in wider context as well).
We
know where the story is going – and it doesn’t disappoint. There is plenty of
bloodshed in the film, although tellingly, Aubert lets some of the more major
events happen off-screen – we see what leads up to them, or the come down, but
not necessarily the act itself. The end of the film, in its way, is both
heartbreaking, and somewhat affirming. All is not lost yet.
I
don’t think Les Affames truly breaks new ground in the zombie genre – but it doesn’t
enough interesting stuff that it should be a zombie film on your radar. For
those (like me) who eventually gave up on The Walking Dead because of its
seemingly limitless nihilism, Les Affames offers something refreshingly
different.
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