Head case
This Widow has near-perfect execution
by Peter Keough
THE WIDOW OF ST.
PIERRE. Directed by Patrice Leconte. Written by Claude Faraldo. With Juliette Binoche,
Daniel Auteuil, Emir Kusturica, Philippe Magnan, and Michel Duchaussoy. A
Lions Gate Films release. In French with English subtitles. At the Avon.
Why don't they make movies in favor of capital punishment?
Actually, if you consider vigilante and action flicks or any movie in which the
good guy kills the bad guy, that's about all they make. Films that take the other side
of the issue tend to stick out because they're polemical and more earnest than
entertaining. Not so Patrice Leconte's The Widow of St. Pierre, a
wrenching melodrama whose politics are submerged below its genuine emotion and
which can take its place among such other great films on the subject as I
Want To Live!, In Cold Blood, and A Short Film About
Killing.
The key to its success (and that of those other three movies) is the long delay
between crime and punishment. Revenge, in cinema, is best served piping hot;
the colder it gets, the more the common humanity of the intended victim is
recognized. Set on the island of St. Pierre, a French possession off the coast
of Newfoundland, in 1850, Widow opens with an especially unattractive
abomination. Two drunken fishermen, on shore after a long haul at sea, stagger
to their captain's cottage to confront him. A knife is produced and it all ends
badly. The two are convicted of murder, and one, Neel Auguste (Serbian director
Emir Kusturica, like a bearish Kris Kristofferson) is sentenced to death.
Easier said than done. St. Pierre has no guillotine (in French slang, the
"widow" of the title) and rather than appear weak-willed and commute the
sentence, the island authorities send word back to Paris (itself in the midst
of revolutionary and reactionary turmoil) to ship one over. Meanwhile, the
condemned man becomes the responsibility of Jean, the captain in charge of the
local garrison. Played by Daniel Auteuil in his finest performance, Jean is an
enigmatic figure: aloof and out of place, he's apparently been exiled to St.
Pierre from Paris. No one is sure why, though his progressive views and his
idolization of his beautiful, upper-crust wife, Pauline (Juliette Binoche, in
the role for which she should have received her Oscar nomination), might have
something to do with it.
Pauline has a thing about rehabilitation and nurturing, and she enlists the
hulking, now docile Auguste to build a greenhouse and perform other errands. As
the months pass while the island awaits the guillotine, her flowers bloom in
the hothouse and the prisoner becomes a local hero. Here Leconte overstates his
case, transforming the killer into a saint who repairs roofs and shovels snow
-- and in one surreal if overwrought scene, into a superhero as he saves the
island's only tavern, and its owner, from plummeting to disaster. Even when
Auguste impregnates one of the local widows as he awaits the arrival of the
"widow" that is his fate, he does the right thing by marrying her.
Ambiguity shadows the altruism of Jean and Pauline, however, and together with
Auguste they form an ambiguous romantic triangle. Something about the impending
execution arouses not only Pauline's outrage but her desire; just mention the
word "guillotine" and she and her husband start tearing off their clothes.
Auguste, the Beast to Pauline's Beauty, seems to embody an erotic force that
revitalizes not only her marriage but the bleak life of the island as well. No
wonder the effete bureaucrats who run the place want to see the sentence
carried out, especially when the poor rally around the condemned giant as the
time of execution draws near. Cutting off his head will be an Oedipal
castration of those who dare defy the patriarchal authority.
But Widow is not so much a political or Freudian parable as it is a
personal one, with the stark island, magnificently photographed in corroded
shades of gray and green by Eduardo Sarra (who brought a similar ecstatic,
elegiacal tone to Jude and The Wings of a Dove), providing a
stark microcosm and with Auguste serving not just as a cause
célèbre but as an Everyman. His death sentence is common to
all, his thoughtless crime is one anyone might be capable of, and his
redemption is universal. The elements with which Leconte relates this allegory
are deceptively simple but infinitely resonant -- a knife, a horse, a woman's
scarf, the sea, the captain's fatalistic smile. Neither does this director have
much use for sentimentality -- compare his depiction of children with those in
such kneejerk exercises in political correctness as Chocolat. By the
film's cathartic, eloquent conclusion, it's almost possible to believe that
love not only can transform those who kill but can transcend death itself.