Lemming Movie Review
Lemming Review
"Lemming" Overview

Rating: NR
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Dominik MollProducer : Michel Saint-Jean
Screenwiter : Gilles Marchand,Dominik Moll
Starring : Laurent Lucas,Charlotte Gainsbourg,Charlotte Rampling,Andre Dussollier
The plight and paranoia of young marriage (and adulthood) has found a giddy
practitioner in German director Dominik Moll. Moll's second film, With a Friend
Like Harry…, took a very direct approach to the idea by using the return of a
high school friend as a way to look into the boredom and grind of young
parenthood, while also using the friend's sensuous fiancé as a point of
catharsis. However simple that may seem, Harry was one of the best films of
2000, and now Moll is back with a much trickier proposition in Lemming.
Alain Getty (Laurent Lucas) has a nice job at an engineering firm where he is
designing a new kind of webcam that can help in everyday tasks. His wife
Benedicte (Charlotte Gainsbourg) hasn't found a job yet and is still unpacking
their things when Alain agrees to allow his boss and his wife to come over for
a dinner. His boss, Richard (Andre Dussollier), arrives at the house with a
jovial aura but his wife (Charlotte Rampling) has the disposition of a
scorpion. That night, they find an injured lemming in their sink pipe. Since a
lemming tends to only live in Scandinavia, it freaks Alain out big time. Things
don’t get any better when the boss' wife commits suicide in the Gettys' house,
which prompts Benedicte to take a very strange turn in mood.
You could cast Lemming off as a simple story of ghosts and possession, but Moll
takes these ideas into realms of unimaginable fright. The key to the film is in
Moll's lead actor, Lucas. His face has an unbelievable ability to shift from
boredom to distrust to absolute terror with no less than a flicker of the
eyeball or the twitch of a cheek muscle. Rampling, the old pro, has little
screen time but is easily the other stand-out. She takes in the lunacy and
seriousness of her character, mixing them into a truly scary performance.
There is certainly some hesitancy in describing this story as Hitchcockian
since the word is used so often to describe modern thrillers (it's used in
three separate quotes on my The Beat That My Heart Skipped poster). However,
Moll has mastered a way of blending mirth and marvel in a way that Hitchcock
was toying with in Vertigo and The Birds. The scene where Lucas walks in on a
kitchen full of lemmings can be described as nothing short of terrifying. Why?
A lemming is a small rodent that resembles a slightly smaller, arguably uglier
hamster. It is nothing that should scare any adult ever. The way Moll stages
it, as Lucas slowly walks from checking on his wife to the kitchen filled with
the things, shows a minimalist, extraordinarily efficient way of building
tension and paying it off in an unexpected way.
The plot shrouds itself in darker symbolism as Benedicte begins to sleep with
Alain's boss. Auguries of marital hatred and fantasies of lust and murder are
brought up as being expected. Moll's tight, terrific film holds the viewer in a
state of limbo where one can not truly grasp what he's getting at until about
two hours after you exit the theater. It's rare that a thriller holds us in
such unawareness while still completely immersing us in story and character. In
fact, it's probably not completely unlike being married.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin



