fighting for love
by Douglas Messerli
Danièle Thompson, Patrice
Chéreau, and Pierre Trividic (screenplay) Patrice Chéreau (director)
Ceux qui m'aiment prendront le train (Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train) / 1998
Imagine joining Mike Newell’s film Four
Weddings and a Funeral (1994) only for the funeral of Gareth (Simon
Callow); and instead of Matthew, Gareth’s long-time lover Matthew (John
Hannah)—the two representing the only gay couple in this hetero-normative
celebration of marriage, the two having been in a kind of marriage the others
in Gareth’s intellectual clique could not recognize—that instead of delivering
a beautiful eulogy by reading another “splendid bugger” W. H. Auden’s poem
“Funeral Blues,” he were to deliver a short and bitter diatribe against his
elderly lover. Or—if you haven’t seen that movie in which once again more
demands that the gay charismatic figure must die so that the heterosexual
others may celebrate their normative couplings—what if you were to attend a
showing of Sidney Lumet’s stylish 1974 retelling of Agatha Christie’s Murder
on the Orient Express—featuring nearly every available British and
Hollywood star of the day:
Lauren Bacall, Ingrid Bergman, Sean Connery,
John Gielgud, Vanessa Redgrave, Michael York, Jacqueline Bisset, Anthony
Perkins, and Wendy Hiller—set in a far less grand and crowded 2nd class train
without the help of Hercule Poirot to untangle their relationships, some of
them seemingly queer, and their connection with the murdered man Lanfranco
Cassetti, alias Edward Ratchett onboard.
Patrice Chéreau’s 1998 work Ceux qui m'aiment
prendront le train (Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train) puts
it audiences in much the same position as I’ve just suggested, and takes it one
step further by peppering his group of acolytes surrounding the
painter/sculptor Jean-Baptiste Emmerich with just a few women (one elderly
self-declared lover of Jean-Baptiste, Lucie, and the wives of some of the
artist’s close male friends) among a group of gay and bisexual men, lovers of
Jean-Baptiste or one another all endlessly milling about in the crowded train
from Paris to Limoges where the pedagogue has determined to be buried—one of
the largest cemeteries in the world. The Jean-Baptise character and the film’s
title were said to have been based on the documentary film-maker François
Reichenbach, some of whose films I’ve reviewed in these volumes.
One
of the great joys—and frustrations—of the film is the requirement to piece
together the soap-opera-like interconnections of the various characters we
encounter on this mad train ride where cinematographer Eric Gautier’s hand-held
camera weaves in and out of the train seat-and aisle-conversations while a
child, Elodie (Delphine Schiltz) behaves almost as badly as Zazie in Louis
Malle’s Zazie dans le métro (1960) as she steals candy, grabs photos
central characters are studying, and basically attempts to create general havoc
throughout. It is she, we later discover, who may inherit the dead man’s
estate.
The
train sequences were filmed over a fourteen day period in two carriages
attached to regularly running trains between Paris and Mulhouse. It’s estimated
that the cast and crew traveled 12,000 kilometers during two weeks in filming
these early scenes. As Sight & Sound commentator Chris Darke wrote,
“...The journey to Limoges is a triumph both of exposition and
choreography.....Éric Gautier's use of handheld 'Scope cinematography gives the
feeling of both buffeting movement and swooping detail." And, I might add,
it helps to confuse our attempts to piece out just who is who, who they love,
and, just as importantly, who they once loved or want to.
This
is much of the fun of the first half of Chereau’s film, and if you desire that
pleasure you should perhaps put off reading the rest of this essay until you
have seen the film for yourself. But I do think that it is important to outline
the interconnections I was able to unravel—
Let us just begin by restating what by the end of the film is easily
discernible: the painter Jean-Baptiste, who has a twin brother Lucien (both
played by Jean-Louis Trintignant) has not only served as a blusteringly
ingratiating guru for most of the males in this film, but has shared his
bed with them. He has also apparently
had a loving relationship with Lucien’s wife, who in reaction to Lucien’s
revenge of silence, eventually kills herself, having remained in their
relationship only for the sake of their son Jean-Marie (Charles Berling), who
out of bitterness for his father also became an acolyte of, and perhaps was
also buggered by, his uncle. The family fortune, overseen by Lucien, was
apparently obtained through the production of shoes (rooms of their home are
still filled with them), which, along with porcelain, is one of the two major
industries of Limoges. Late in his life Jean-Louis evidently also had an affair
with Lucie (Marie Daëms), who, having kept in regular contact with the artist,
describes herself his “impossible woman”—an epithet to which another member of
the group responds is perfect for the “impossible man”— who evidently has made
the travel arrangements for this group outing, and is the only one who actually
seems to be grieving Jean-Baptiste’s death.
In
the early scenes, we observe François (Pascal
Greggory, director Chéreau’s longtime lover) looking over slides and scrapbooks
of the artist’s work, in seeming preparation for a eulogy he never delivers,
the fact for which Lucie later criticizes him. He is later described by others
as Jean-Baptiste’s “favorite,” and has been working for years on a book on the
painter without evidently finishing it. Indeed, one of the subplots of this
movie is how all of Jean-Baptiste’s friends and lovers, although sustained by
him, broke with him due to the artist’s abuse, his fickleness, or insatiable
demands.
François’s lover of the past few years, whom another of
the group members, Bernard (Olivier Gourmet) gauchely refers to as François’
fiancée, is Louis (Bruno Todeschini), a beautiful man who seems to be attending
the funeral simply as François’s friend, but who apparently has also come to
know Jean-Baptiste through their mutual visits. We never know if he might have
been one of the original disciples or whether François met him through the artist. But, oddly
enough, it is Louis who becomes one of the major figures by film’s end.
Before I describe the complexity of Louis’ character, however, I should
finish Bernard off, since he is later characterized by Jean-Baptiste himself as
an “a loser and an ass-kisser,” who when he is mocked by the others, presuming
it is because his wife Lorette is mad. If nothing else, he actually has written
a small book about the author. But in his sudden recognition that he is being
laughed at for his own behavior, not his wife’s, so hurts him that he abruptly
leaves the wake—which we might better describe as an “awakening” for the
guests. But enough about this hanger-on.
On
his way to the train itself, he again spots the boy, and when Lucie becomes
terrified at having lost one of their members, Louis quickly volunteers to go
back in search of her, obviously to seek out the mysterious boy once again.
This brief encounter clearly effects Louis, and when he returns to his
seat next to François he tells him “I love you.” His
lover responds, “We’ve been together too long for such declarations.” And when
Louis asks if he still agrees with their original commitment to being
completely honest with each other, François hands him a handkerchief which, he
jokes, his mother sends him in large quantities. “She thinks I’m too sensitive.
Everyone knows I’m not.” He pauses before delivering the zinger, “So don’t use
kid gloves. I’m listening.”
Louis goes on to describe the boy, admitting that “I love him.”
“Has
it been going on long?”
“No,
just since the station. I’ve known him for ages. But we never met or spoke.”
“Are
you kidding?”
“It’s sudden, I’m crushed.”
If this appears to be a slightly surreal
conversation, it almost immediately turns even stranger as François inquires:
“Did he tell you he was HIV positive? [Pause] Bruno.
Because he didn’t tell me. He told me long after.”
Shocked by his lover’s intense knowledge of
the boy, he also discovers that he didn’t find out until six months later.
“Then it wasn’t a fling? It was a real affair.”
“Since about a year. Didn’t Jean-Baptiste tell you?”
Louis turns toward François, rising to say, “You’re a scumbag.”
During their conversation, the train has made an unscheduled stop at La
Souterrane, and Louis gets off and enters the station, Bruno soon joining him.
When the train is finally ready to move on, Louis does not reboard, while Bruno
does, making it apparent that the boy is still in some sort of relationship
with François. As the elder later asks the boy: “Was I such a bastard because I
left, or because I stayed.”
Previously, we have seen Claire (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi) in the bathroom
popping a pill and stuffing several boxes of pills into her coat pockets. When
she enters the main car to speak to her husband, Jean-Marie (Lucien’s son if
you recall) he will not even speak to her. We soon learn that because of her
drug addiction the two are breaking up, and she has refused to even answer his
letters with regard to property rights and other matters. The two rightfully
are furious with each other with seemingly no means of reconciliation.
What Jean-Marie doesn’t know is that apparently Claire has given up
drugs, and the pill she has just popped, and the others stuffed inside her coat
are to help relieve her body from the complications of her being pregnant. She
is afraid that if she were to tell him, he would even doubt that it was his
child. Throughout the rest of the voyage the two glower and snip at one
another, and because of their broken relationship Jean-Marie has grown so
bitter that he delivers the spiteful eulogy of which I’ll soon report.
Certainly, there seems to be no hope for their reunion, particularly since
Jean-Baptiste has long warned his pupil about the dangers of a woman like
Claire, obviously resenting that his nephew has chosen to marry a woman.
Also on board is that obnoxiously charming girl and her mother Catherine
(Dominique Blanc). We only discover their reason for traveling with the others
as they all see, out the window, Elodie’s father Thierry (Roschdy Zem) speeding
by in a station wagon carrying the coffin of Jean-Baptiste to take the body
from Paris to his designated burial plot in Limoges. Thierry is clearly another
of Jean-Baptiste’s many male lovers, but not through his tutelage, but rather
through meeting the artist after he had a serious heart attack and was
hospitalized in the institution where Thierry worked as night nurse. When the
frail man finally was released, Thierry, as he himself describes the event,
carried the body home in his arms and nursed him to health, obviously
developing a relationship to him so close that Jean-Baptiste eventually came to
describe Thierry and Catherine’s daughter Elodie as his granddaughter, and
accordingly, bequeathed her his part of the Emmerich estate.
Thierry, as we gradually begin to discover, is a kind of wild man who
picks up a hitchhiker—who understandably is a bit wary of riding in a car with
a corpse in the backseat—tossing him out of the car when the driver discovers
that he has to take a detour. Later, Thierry, who
since it is later intimated provides drugs to Jean-Marie, may himself be on
drugs, spinning off the road steering the car to a rest in the middle of a
wheatfield. The car eventually arrives in Limoges via a tow truck.
As
we slowly untangle their relationships over the first frenetic hour of this
film, we realize, as Lisa Nesselson observes in Variety,
“There’s not a happy camper in the bunch.” This ensemble, she asserts, “makes
the average Woody Allen film seem like a picnic for the well-adjusted.”
The first thing Jean-Marie does upon the group’s arrival in Limoges is
visit the impossibly gargantuan cemetery in order to visit his mother’s grave,
the only woman we feel that he was ever truly able to completely offer love.
There he encounters his father who admits his own faults, particularly his
ineffectual attempts to offer his wife something that might take the place of
Jean-Baptiste’s attentions. Lucien is now even afraid in facing the group of
mourners, that they might blame him for his wife’s suicide, as Jean-Marie has
already made clear to others, he does. Yet here, actually confronting the man
he has hated for so many years, Jean-Marie assures him that his mother was a
manic-depressive and that everyone knew that fact.
Yet only an hour or two later, Jean-Marie, speaking to the small band of
would-be grievers blames all of them, including himself, for letting down
Jean-Baptiste, for not living up to his expectations. Obviously still furious
with his own failed marriage and stung by the artist’s condemnation of it, he
virulently expresses viewpoints that we know and further discover to be
completely false:
"He [Jean-Baptiste] wouldn’t have wanted to be a father.
I wonder whether anyone wants to be a father. He didn’t want any children."
The
battle ground is set up for a violent encounter between the two sexually
confused married bi-sexual men, both bitter for their own failed marriages, and
also both now fighting for the right to inherit what Jean-Baptiste has left
them—although it is really in Lucien’s hands who has told Catherine that he
does not intend to contest his brother’s will. In the midst of the battle
Thierry slugs his wife as she attempts to intervene, upon which she warns him
that if he ever strikes her again she will take her daughter and leave him.
Jean-Marie, having attacked nearly everyone in sight, goes running off for rest
of the night.
Viviane seems the most rational being still standing, and as
Lucien—hearing that she is a “shoe freak”—offers her a pair of new shoes from
the enormous stock that still remains in his house, the
Despite all the fury, Thierry eventually makes up with Catherine.
Returning early the next morning, Jean-Marie is told by Claire that she is
planning to leave him with his unborn child; but still feeling love for one
another they quickly find themselves in each other’s arms and soon after
engaging in sex.
Unpredictably, François, the man who as the Variety critic
posited, is the “one serene presence...whose cynical acceptance of every
possible chamber in affairs of the heart allows him to glide above the fray,”
at film’s end is only one left without someone else. As he witnesses from the
taxi Louis and Bruno hugging in the hotel window, sees Claire and Jean-Marie
walking together along the street, and watches Thierry, Catherine, and their
daughter driving off, the art historian returns to Paris almost as a villain, a
man who because he has been unwilling to fight for love, to shed tears into
those dozens of handkerchiefs he is sent by his mother, will have no one but
himself to blame for his lonely nights ahead.
Director Patrice Chéreau died in Paris on October 7,
2013 from lung cancer at 68 years of age. He was not buried in Limoges, but in
the great Paris cemetery Père Lachaise. The film above was not much appreciated
by US viewers, despite the fact that it won the Best Director and Best Actor
César Awards. I loved the film so much that although I wrote the piece above
based on a DVD viewing from Netflix, I also ordered my own copy so that I might
watch it over a regular intervals for the remainder of my life.
Los Angeles, March 28, 2021 | Reprinted from My Queer Cinema blog and World Cinema
Review (March 2021).







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