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Film Description
One of the great debut films of recent times, Bruno Dumont's La vie de Jésus presents life's brutality and exhilaration played out by turns within the quarters of a tiny Flemish country town. Here, positioned in relative isolation from the rest of so-called cultural Europe, the connections between individuals take on a physical power inflicted by boredom, desperation, and raw urges.
Freddy and Marie (played by David Douche and Marjorie Cottreel in astonishing performances) are two teenagers with their futures uncertain and their present undefined. They ride motorbikes, they have sex – communication like any other sort. But in their hometown of Bailleul in Flanders, where news from the world-at-large disappears just as quickly as it drifts in, death proves to be inescapable, and decidedly permanent. As the film's powerful climax unfolds, the viewer will come away with his or her own interpretation of how the life of Christ has figured into the story of Freddy and Marie – a contemplation on the magnitude of mercy.
With its frank, honest depictions of the body in the course of the sexual act, La vie de Jésus announced the emergence of a powerful philosophical intelligence – and a master of dramatic control – onto the scene of world cinema. Winner of the prestigious BFI Sutherland Trophy, Camera d'Or at Cannes, the Prix Jean Vigo, European Discovery of the Year at the European Film Awards, amongst many others.
Full-colour 40-page booklet including a lengthy interview with Dumont on the making of the film, and Dumont's work-notes created during production, in new English translations.
Don’t be misled by the title; this is an unsparing picture of racism and ruined lives in a small French village. Dumont’s film is both sexually explicit and brutally h... more >
Don’t be misled by the title; this is an unsparing picture of racism and ruined lives in a small French village. Dumont’s film is both sexually explicit and brutally honest, never striving for easy sympathy for its damaged, violent protagonists. < less