52 Films by Women Vol. 2: 1. RAW (Dir. Julia Ducournau)
You are driving down a quiet country road at 30, maybe 40
miles an hour. All of a sudden, a young woman runs out from behind a tree. You
swerve and crash the car. But your problems don’t end there.
This is the opening of ‘Raw’, the uber-confident debut cinema
feature of writer-director Julia Ducournau that puts new blood – quite
literally – into the horror genre. Ducournau’s other credits include the ninety-minute
TV movie ‘Mange’ (Eat) and a short film ‘Junior’. By her own admission,
Ducournau makes films about transformations – young women seen as unthreatening
assume a confidence and strength that is terrifying.
‘Raw’ is about cannibalism, in which a young first year veterinary
school student, Justine (Garance Marillier) discovers a hitherto suppressed
taste for flesh, after eating meat for the first time and then being exposed to
the human variety.
Her nightmare begins from the moment she is dropped off by
her parents. Justine’s possessions are turned out of her dorm. First year
students are blooded, subjected to humiliating treatment by the older students.
If you are a parent thinking of sending your child to a French university, you
might want to reconsider after watching this film.
The adults in the faculty aren’t that interested. Incidentally,
the supporting cast is augmented by Belgian film directors: Bouli Lanners as a
truck driver and Marion Vernoux as a nurse.
Justine lives in the shadow of her older sister Alexia (Ella
Rumpf) who is something of a rebel. She doesn’t answer her parents’ calls and
assumes a gothic demeanour. Justine is torn between a relationship with a boy,
Adrien (Rabah Naït Oufella) and following the aloof example of her sister.
Justine’s relationship with Alexia takes a ‘no going back’ turn when a
Brazilian ‘wax off’ goes nastily wrong.
The film is least successful when it explains Justine’s
flesh craving in a late movie twist. It works best – and puts you through the
wringer – when Justine gives way to her addiction without understanding why it
feels so natural, struggling all the while to maintain normal relationships
with her fellow students.
The setting is cleverly contrived. Where else could you walk
around with clothes spattered with blood than in a veterinary college, the
purpose of which is to inure you to the sight of blood – and worst – for the
purpose of developing a steady, medical hand?
The ‘Mexican stand-off’ in which the two sisters have their
teeth dug into each other’s forearms has to count as one of the most arresting
images in modern cinema. ‘Raw’ (or ‘Grave’ to call the film by its French
title) is an outstanding horror-slash-coming of age film, with two terrific
central performances from Marillier and Rumpf. When it was screened at the
Toronto International Film Festival, there were reports of fainting. The
audience watching it with me at the London Film Festival were made of stronger
stuff – they voted for Brexit, after all. But it is definitely not one for the
squeamish.
Reviewed at Vue, West End Cinema, Screen 7, Tuesday 11 October 2016, 12:00 midday screening (London Film Festival)
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
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