In the House [Dans la Maison]

"Excellent"

In the House [Dans la Maison] Review


With Ozon's usual sharp writing and direction, this black comedy is a fabulous series of provocations, challenging us to explore how we see, or perhaps imagine, the people in our lives. It's also a playful exploration of the nature of storytelling itself, using a teacher-student relationship to reveal all kinds of uncomfortable truths.

The teacher and student in question are Germain (Luchini), who's tired of teaching literature to illiterate students, and shy 16-year-old Claude (Umhauer), a gifted young writer. His essays spark Germain's imagination because they continue on from each other to serialise his encounters with the family of his friend Rapha (Ughetto). As Claude writes about flirting with Rapha's mum (Sagnier) or becoming pals with his dad (Menochet), Germain becomes gripped by the story. And so does his wife Jeanne (Scott Thomas), who sees this as a wonderful escape from the mundane pressures in her life. But in a private tutoring session with Claude, Germain crosses an ethical line. And things start to get strange.

Writer-director Ozon is wickedly blurring the line between fact and fiction, as everyone who reads Claude's essays imagines the people in ways that fuel their own fantasies. So events unfold through a variety of perspectives, some of which must surely be imagined, especially as Germain and Claude adjust the characters to reveal hidden secrets. Yes, this brings out the voyeuristic tendencies in all of the characters, and in us as well, since we too are living vicariously through people whose lives seem so much more interesting than ours. Even if they are supposed to be us.

Luchini is terrific as Germain, a man who recognises that his student is probably a better writer than he was. And Umhauer gives Claude a terrific layer of mystery (the curtain is pulled back on his rather tough life just once). Meanwhile, Scott Thomas delivers yet another sharp-edged performance as a woman whose secret desires are perhaps too close to the surface. And Ozon lets all of this unfurl beautifully, gliding smoothly through the scarier scenes with a cool Hitchcockian eye for telling detail. It may leave rather a lot to the imagination, but that's clearly the point.

Rich Cline



Facts and Figures

Genre: Foreign

Production compaines: Wild Bunch, France 2 Cinéma, Mandarin Film, FOZ

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5

Cast & Crew

Director:

Producer: , Nicolas Altmeyer,

Starring: as Jeanne, as Esther, Denis Ménochet as Rapha père, Jean-François Balmer as Le proviseur, Fabrice Colson as Client de la galerie, Diana Stewart as Une femme au balcon, Ernst Umhauer as Claude, Stéphanie Campion as Une femme au balcon, Bastien Ughetto as Rapha fils, as Germain

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