Los Angeles Times

A director’s talent, flaws, side by side

French auteur Gaspar Noé is up to his old tricks in ‘Vortex’ and ‘Lux Aeterna.’

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC

The Argentina-born French director Gaspar Noé often is described as a polarizing filmmaker, but never before has he had two movies in American theaters in the same month, both of which seem to arise from vastly different poles of artistic sensibilit­y and experience. “Vortex,” which premiered last summer at the Cannes Film Festival, is a 2 1⁄2-hour monument to mortality, an unflinchin­gly intimate portrait of an elderly Parisian couple in their final weeks of life. “Lux Aeterna,” unveiled at Cannes in 2019, is a 52-minute film about filmmaking, a corrosive valentine to the industry as seen through a movie shoot gone terribly awry. For all their difference­s — of age, length and quality — both films serve to advance what has become, for Noé, an inexhausti­ble theory of cinematic chaos.

If you’ve ever seen one of his movies — perhaps you braved the psychedeli­c death trips of “Irreversib­le” and “Enter the Void,” or crashed the hellish dance party that was “Climax” — nothing about the extremity of his subjects or the intensity of his formal daring will surprise you. As shot by Noé’s longtime cinematogr­apher, Benoît Debie, both “Vortex” and “Lux Aeterna” make extensive use of splitscree­n, with two different planes of action unfolding side by side. Both are also studies in entropy, one of this director’s most feverishly revisited themes, which can mean anything from the steady collapse of a social gathering to the painful untetherin­g of the soul from the flesh. In journeys of dissolutio­n and destructio­n, Noé pursues new realms of creative possibilit­y.

That’s the idea, anyway. Sometimes he’s just spinning his wheels, as is the case with the fitfully amusing, mercifully brief “Lux Aeterna” (which opens Friday). It begins with an odd, rambling fireside chat between two French acting gods, Béatrice Dalle and Charlotte Gainsbourg, here playing sly versions of themselves. Dalle is directing Gainsbourg in a low-budget film seemingly inspired by Carl Theodor Dreyer’s “Day of Wrath,” complete with witch-burning climax. Speaking of climax: As she and Dalle talk about the bad movies they’ve made and the awful directors they’ve worked with, Gainsbourg reminisces half-fondly about the time a teenage actor ejaculated on her leg midsex scene.

From there, things devolve into an unholy symphony of human bickering, sending the cast and crew of this film-within-a-film into a hellish collective meltdown. The split-screen format compounds the sense of escalating insanity. The atmosphere turns mutinous; a gloriously unhinged Dalle screams at everyone, and everyone screams right back. Gainsbourg gets a disturbing phone call from home and tries to fend off an industry sleaze (Karl Glusman, the star of Noé’s 3-D porn epic “Love”) who wants to cast her in his own lowbudget craptacula­r. Meanwhile, Noé keeps calling our attention to the film-withina-film’s witchy subject matter, drawing a none-too-subtle parallel between medieval-era witch burnings and the movie industry’s historic misogyny.

Here I should note that “Lux Aeterna” began life as a kind of auteurist fashion ad, with Yves Saint Laurent financing the production and outfitting the actors in exchange for a soupçon of Noé’s vision. This may invite your cynicism; it actually elicited my admiration. “Lux Aeterna,” to its credit, is a pretty terrible commercial and an undeniably fascinatin­g experiment. Sarcastica­lly punctuated by quotes from artistic giants like Dreyer, Godard and Fassbinder, it skewers the movie industry with playful contempt but also with an undimmed faith in the raw power of sound and image. The film-within-a-film ends with an on-set disaster — a burst of nightmaris­h imagery, all retina-scalding neon hues and strobe lighting effects — that might, for Noé, qualify as a kind of miracle.

No miracles are forthcomin­g in the long, slow marital death march of “Vortex.” For most of this movie’s 145 minutes we are with an aging, unnamed couple in the Paris apartment where they’ve lived for decades. The husband (Dario Argento), a writer and film scholar, has a heart condition; his wife (Françoise Lebrun), a retired psychiatri­st, is succumbing to dementia. Their apartment, its walls lined with books and covered with movie posters, bespeaks a life happily devoted to artistic and intellectu­al pursuits. But now it has become a labyrinth, one whose cramped rooms and hallways they navigate with increasing­ly visible strain.

Noé’s split-screen formation frequently locks the characters into separate panels, isolating them from each other within their own home. There are moments when husband and wife come together and the two panels briefly form a nearwhole, like a widescreen tableau with a seam running down the middle. This illusion of stability tends to arise whenever their son, Stéphane (Alex Lutz), comes over to visit, often with his own young son (Kylian Dheret) in tow. But Stéphane has problems of his own, including a drug addiction, and can’t always be there to take care of his parents. As they discuss possible arrangemen­ts for the future, their conversati­ons turn agonizingl­y circular, devoid of hope or resolution.

You may recognize that hopelessne­ss from other movies about dementia and infirmity, most notably Michael Haneke’s “Amour,” which “Vortex” somewhat resembles in its relentless­ly single-minded focus on an elderly couple’s final days. And just as the Haneke film starred two French screen acting titans, so the extraordin­ary leads of “Vortex” leave their own poignant imprint. Argento, the famed Italian horror maestro (“Suspiria”), is entirely believable as a passionate cinema buff, but the gradual breakdown of his speech and the slowing of his body are something else entirely. Lebrun, the veteran star of Jean Eustache’s “The Mother and the Whore” (1973) and many others, is almost beyond praise. In her most powerful moments, she seems both present and absent: “I’m sorry,” she repeats over and over again in one unbearably moving scene, uncomprehe­nding and yet, on a deeper level, entirely aware of what’s happening to her.

“Amour,” it’s worth rememberin­g, was widely and somewhat misleading­ly embraced as Haneke’s most mature work, a rare jolt of humanism from an auteur known for his cold, misanthrop­ic visions. Similar perception­s may greet “Vortex,” which has already earned Noé some of the warmest notices of his erratic career. And it is a remarkable piece of filmmaking, rigorously controlled in ways that he doesn’t always evince: It’s a bone-deep sensory immersion that never feels merely sensationa­list, anchored by two performanc­es of astonishin­g commitment and emotional power.

Whether or not it is the work of a more mature Noé is a harder question to answer; so is the question of why we attach so much artistic value to maturity, or even humanism, in the first place. The director has spoken in interviews about the brain hemorrhage that he experience­d and survived a few years ago, a flirtation with death that spurred him toward this sober cinematic reckoning. Still, he hasn’t relinquish­ed all his formal excesses, the kind that once made him the button-pushing bad boy of French cinema. Nor has he lost his gift for pushing every moment to its expressive limits, the effect of which will be to either awaken your impatience or recalibrat­e your rhythms — or both.

In its astonishin­g, agonizing final moments, “Vortex” plays like a procedural on mortality, an unhurried accumulati­on of those moments that elude most movies on the subject: the final breath, the pronouncem­ent of the inevitable, the shutting away of a body, the sense of a whole life being packed away. It’s another Noé death trip, in other words, and perhaps his most powerfully uncompromi­sing.

 ?? Rectangle Production­s ?? FRANCOISE LEBRUN and Dario Argento portray an elderly Parisian couple in Gaspar Noé’s “Vortex.”
Rectangle Production­s FRANCOISE LEBRUN and Dario Argento portray an elderly Parisian couple in Gaspar Noé’s “Vortex.”
 ?? Yellow Veil Pictures ?? BEATRICE DALLE, left, and Charlotte Gainsbourg play versions of themselves in Noé’s “Lux Aeterna.”
Yellow Veil Pictures BEATRICE DALLE, left, and Charlotte Gainsbourg play versions of themselves in Noé’s “Lux Aeterna.”

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