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Venice Review: Brady Corbet’s ‘The Childhood Of A Leader’ With Berenice Bejo, Stacy Martin & Robert Pattinson

Childhood of A LeaderNo guts, no glory. Actor Brady Corbet flings himself off the cliff of his directorial debut with a defiant disregard for safety or convention that is startling, admirable and exceptionally unusual to see from a neophyte filmmaker. It is also categorically lunatic, because for all there are moments when, arms windmilling and "Geronimoooooo!" ringing out, it almost seems like he might make it to the other side, of course he doesn’t: guts will get you so far, but gravity always wins. Alternating immense bombast with long stretches of longueur in its psychologically questionable evocation of the formative years of a future despot, the film is formally confident, stylistically inventive and intensely irritating — all the way up to an ending so extraordinarily bonkers you might find yourself simultaneously snorting at its ridiculousness and clapping at its audacity. That’s if you’re not using your hands to cover your poor ears: it is far from the best film in Venice, but it is certainly the loudest.

Childhood of a LeaderIntentions are announced as though through a bullhorn during a pointlessly eardrum-shattering prologue, in which archive footage of WWI devastation plays out beneath Scott Walker‘s apocalyptically discordant score. And then, divided into chapters (or "tantrums" as they’re headed), the story proper begins. It’s 1918 and we’re in rural France as choirboy Prescott (Tom Sweet) bolts from evening mass to hide behind a wall and throw stones at the parishioners as they leave. No doubt there’s a subtler way to put it, using a term like "troubled" or "disruptive" or even the currently favored "ADHD," but basically, the child’s a dyspeptic little prick from the get-go, an impression aided by Sweet’s unnervingly un-cute performance, despite the Little Lord Fauntleroy curls. Plunging into the woods to escape capture by the irate locals he’s been pelting, he’s chased down by his elegant, highly strung mother (Berenice Bejo) and dragged back to their new home where his father (Liam Cunningham), a high-ranking diplomat for President Woodrow Wilson, is entertaining family friend Charles Marker (Robert Pattinson). The men talk about Marx and Weltpolitik over games of billiards; Prescott is mostly left in the care of Mum, who frequently delegates the more nurturing or instructive duties of motherhood to house servant Mona and local girl Ada (Stacy Martin) respectively. This frees Mother up to have migraines and snap at the help, in time-honored period movie tradition.

Childhood Of A LeaderBut Corbet does challenge at least some period movie conventions, though not always successfully. He has an odd habit of hanging onto shots for a long time after the actors have left, so we spend quite a bit of the film looking at empty rooms or passageways. And the soundtrack is simply insane even between the twin poles of the opening and closing sections when all the knobs are turned up to 11 — this is definitively one of the most interesting scores of the year, even if it’s hard to endorse the sonic-torture way it’s used at times. The film looks impressive too, with "45 Years" DP Lol Crawley making the most of rich, candlelit interiors and achieving a refreshing sense of modernity with a few tracking shots following Prescott as he clatters through corridors and up stairs. But thematically and narratively, the film flounders: both parents’ attempts at discipline yield little result save to harden the pint-sized sociopath even further against them. Hints at Prescott’s burgeoning sexual awareness, or the evolution of his right-wing worldview remain frustratingly underdeveloped. At one point, he gropes Ada during a French lesson, and at another he seems particularly taken with Aesop’s fable about the mouse and the lion — but what either of those things mean for the thrust of the story is unclear.

Perhaps that’s because the story has very little thrust. There’s no forward momentum in these episodes, no sense of anything but a nasty little kid getting nastier while the characters around him more or less turn in circles on the spot rather than experiencing anything as dynamic as an arc of change. This adds saggy, sludgy weight to the middle portion of the film, where Corbet’s more experimental tendencies take a back seat to a grandiose seriousness that the film has done little to earn. Within this mire, the actors apart from Sweet are saddled with fairly one-note roles and only the stalwart Cunningham really makes anything more of what is on the page (written by Corbet and Mona Fastvold). Bejo runs the gamut from pained to petulant, and Pattinson has very little to do in his few short scenes, one of which is perplexingly framed as a gotcha moment, despite the fact that everything in the film has signposted it from the very beginning. 

Childhood Of A LeaderSo why is it that despite all its glaring, blaring flaws, there’s something admirable about "The Childhood of a Leader"? Perhaps it’s simply that whether one likes it or not, it feels uncompromised, like it’s completely the film that Corbet set out to make. That might sound like faint praise, but intentionality at this level is rare, and it is ultimately (a few films down the line, mind you) what sets an auteur filmmaker apart from a journeyman. Or perhaps it simply bludgeons you into semi-submission. By the time the camera thrashes and wheels crazily up into the sky and your ears start to bleed to a particular passage of Walker’s music that sounds like someone put a screaming baby, a gun and Bernard Herrmann‘s "Psycho" score into a tin box and threw it down a fire escape, all we can be really sure of, is that "Childhood of a Leader" is not quite something good, but it is quite something. [C+]

Browse through all our coverage of the 2015 Venice Film Festival by clicking here.


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11 COMMENTS

  1. It wasn\’t that bad. The last part could have been dropped. Fine acting throughout, and as for scenes continuing after the actors have left, you might not realise this but film is a visual medium.

  2. So happy for Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold. In his acceptance speech for Best Director, Corbet said he\’d been working on this film for ten years, so to see the culmination of his dream with Best Debut Film and him to win Best Director was I\’m sure beyond his imagining. It\’s a wonderful inspiration for young filmmakers, and I would also like to see an interview with him here. And a nod to Pattinson, who is not afraid to work with a first time director (and who\’s participation probably helped secure the financing to get the film made). He doesn\’t just talk the talk, he walks the walk, and that\’s admirable.

  3. @Tali,kstew stans are mostly intrested in trashing Rob\’s curent GF on gossip sites.Anyway,TCOAL won 2 awards at the Venice FF for a debut and for the best directing Horizons Award.Congratulations,pity that reviewers especially from other movie outlets can\’t appreciate a good movie directed by a young,talented director.What about an interview with Brady Corbet?

  4. How nice to see a calm comment section. I suppose the Robert Pattinson fans are too busy spewing their hatred on the articles pertaining to his ex though. This sounds like an intriguing film. Best of luck to Brady Corbet and co.

  5. The child looks like he gives a fantastic performance in the clips, I\’m still interested in seeing this grand experiment and happy that young filmmakers like Corbet and Fastvold are getting the chance to realize their dreams. It\’s funny you mention the lingering shots after a character has left the frame — that drove me nuts in Scorsese\’s New York, New York. There must be at least ten minutes of footage of walls and hallways after the characters have left the frame in that already overly-long movie.

  6. Interesting how mixed the review are. Cine Vue gave the film 5/5 stars, Empire calles it a masterpiece and together with other critics they thought it was he best film in Venice thus far. It shows once again how different perception can be.

  7. hmm it sounds like a hard sell but i am intrigued. bold and ambitious sounds amazing to me. sick of lazy and "just trying to make award baity movies" directors and screenwriters *cough* the danish girl *cough*

  8. Gracias por la Review. Espero que el público tenga la oportunidad de verla. Me encantan las películas con historia y esta parece que tiene mucho que ofrecer.

    Dani

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