Bestiare
(2012, Denis Côté)
It
barely over a year ago that Québec filmmaker Denis Côté charmed
and mystified audiences with Curling, a lyrical, quiet and
subtle story about the relationship between a socially inept single
father and his daughter, whom he preserves from ills of the world in
hermit-like manner. Showcasing an enviable ability to surf from one
genre to another, director Côté returns with a documentary about
the animals which parade in and around Parc Safari (located just
outside the city of Montreal), both during the summertime when they
come out to strut their stuff and during the bitter winter period
when kept under close scrutiny by the caretakers in confined spaces.
A
plot synopsis or overview would serve absolutely no purpose in the
case of Bestiaire, not
because it is a documentary, but because the film honestly depicts
exactly what was written about the introductory paragraph. Côté
carefully chooses a series of locations to rest his camera in order
to catch something interesting in the frame...and the animals are
then permitted to do what they do, which limits itself to walking
around, sniffling, eating, sleeping, observing what the viewer
assumes are some people walking about, performing their ritualistic
tasks of keeping the establishment fully functional. This first
portion of the film, which transpires during the winter season with
the animals resting and playing in the park's Hemingford, Québec
winter compound. Bestiaire
quickly establishes itself as the sort of documentary that offers so
little information in terms of narration or interviews, given that
their are strictly none whatsoever throughout the entire film, that
the viewer is left to soak in the images and sounds and make do with
the picture in however way it speaks to them individually. It is a
bit of a gamble on the part of the director, especially when
considering that films of this nature rarely capture audiences to
fullest degree. Documentaries that make it big are more along the
lines of Bowling for Columbine
and Super Size Me,
which stuff the viewer with information and package it all in a
beautiful, quirky presentation. There is nothing inherently wrong
with such documentary filmmaking techniques, they are merely being
mentioned in this review for comparative purposes in order for anyone
reading this article and curious to discover Bestiaire
to have a sense of what is in store for them. This is the polar
opposite of such films.
On
the topic of Côté's static frames and the animal movements within
them, the picture's initial chapter does present some arresting and
even thought provoking imagery. The most striking aspect is without
question the presentation of a tremendous wild animals, clearly not
from this continent, roaming around on the snow around buildings
resembling boring farm factories. Immediately this brings to our
attention that the creatures are not where they should be. That being
said, Parc Safari, like all zoos, remains a business, with hundreds
of people looking after the animals as best they can with as much
dedication as they can muster on a daily basis. Côté provides a
totally objective insiders view how an enterprise such as this
operates, Safari being a curious example precisely because it is
located in a region of the world where the temperature drops below 0
degrees Celsius for a solid portion of the year, a climate lions,
chimpanzees, hyenas, bison and tropical birds are obviously not
accustomed to. It makes for a strange juxtaposition of different
worlds and speaks to the complicated relationship between humans and
their wildlife counterparts in the animal kingdom. Man can dominate
such terrific beasts, yet even when apparently in control, the
greatest of precautions must always be taken. Perhaps 'dominate' is
the incorrect term, but the capability to artificially create a home
for wild animals which operates at the whim of Man is really a
fascinating notion if one stops to wonder about it even if only for a
moment.
The
second and shortest portion of the film invites the audience to
observe employees hard at work in the creation of animals busts and
statues often seen in museums. Côté focuses especially on an
individual preparing a little loon statuette. The Styrofoam carved body
awaits on the table as the man carefully, diligently peels of the
skin and plumage from the deceased bird. The movements are calculated
and precise. No words are spoken, full concentration in invested in
the visually repulsive if endlessly watchable steps. In this room,
animals are given 'new life'. After all, once the employees are
completed what is asked of them and the statues are placed in nature
museums, who does not stop to admire them? They appear clean, proud,
majestic...and yet they are dead. All very strange, this business.
Finally,
summer arrives and Parc Safari is open to the public. Vehicles are
permitted to take a slow drive down some specific roads where less
dangerous animals roam, visitors may walk through protective
see-through hallways in a lion's den, monkeys lie around in their
parks and swing in their trees, families take rides on infant
elephants. The culmination of the journey Bestiaire
embarked on does not resolve the many provocative thoughts that may wrestle
in the viewer's mind. So this is what it has come to? Lions growing
ridiculously lazy as kids walk by with their parents, chimpanzees
looking away from visitors, either completely oblivious to their
presence or bored out of their skulls, elephants following the same
simple path as instructed by their caretakers whenever visitors pay
money to hop onto their backs. The Parc Safari conclusion only
further pronounces the oddity that is the life of these creatures,
who are not permitted to being themselves, all the while living a
secure life where humans dutifully serve their every need. The good
with the bad, as always.
There
is an irony to the fact that Denis Côté opens the film with a class
of four or five art students each drawing their own versions of a
fawn statue that stands before them. They are making pieces of art,
in essence artificial representations of a wild animal, the latter
now an artificial presentation of itself. The wonderful employees at
Parc Safari and its winter hideout very much do the same, simulating
homes for African beasts, although their profession is complicated by
the presence of real life animals. Here is Denis Côté, engulfing
the entire process through film, just another medium in our continued
quest to construct representations of real life that can speak to us
in subtle and complex ways.
1 comment:
Very nice commentary on this film, thank you!
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