MovieChat Forums > L'intrus (2005) Discussion > Confused....what is it all about?

Confused....what is it all about?


I just saw this film last night and I am confused.
There are flashbacks, but I am not sure who many of the characters are. Who is the Russian woman? Whose heard did he get? Did he have 2 sons?
Did he get dragged in the snow by the Russian woman or was just a dream? What did the end signify with the dogsled?

Anyway, on the whole this film was not satisfying because there were so many unanswered questions. Some of the scenery was lovely, but often that isn't enough for me.

Anyone care to enlighten me?

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Claire Denis interviewed by Gavin Smith

In your 30s you were an assistant director. What were you doing before that? You were 20 in May 68—what were you up to?

I was already married to a photographer. He worked for Vogue and Harper's Bazaar in England. I met him when I was 15. He asked me to model for him, and finally we got married. He gave me a Leica and I worked as his assistant. It was a strange situation: he was my husband and he was teaching me things. It was no fun to have a private life together and to also be his apprentice. I was on the side, on my own, doing my own things, meandering, but it was leading me to cinema indirectly. He was very much a cinephile. It was great for me, really. I had not been to the movies very much when I was a kid. I decided to try to enter film school and was selected in 1971.

How many years were you there?

A couple. IDHEC almost closed. After '68, the school had been taken over by the students. The school's director was a French filmmaker, Louis Daquin. He was great, maybe not perfect in terms of tuition and organization, but he had a great spirit. He was a member of the Communist party and his films were very political, about things like the coal miners in the north of France. He started making films rather young, but he was well known, well respected, and very militant. And he was sort of blacklisted. He couldn't find money to make films. He brought in people like [cinematographers] Henri Alekan and Sacha Vierny. Peter Brook would teach us about directing actors. It was very alive.

A few years ago I spotted your name in the credits of Dusan Makavejev's Sweet Movie. Was that your first job?

First job on the payroll. I had worked as an extra on Bresson's Four Nights of a Dreamer. You can see me walking by the Seine in a night scene. One of my teachers was Pierre Lhomme. He was the DP and he recruited students to be extras. One day, I don't know why, someone told Dusan Makavejev that I could speak a little English. He did not want to speak French and he wanted a go-between for him and the crew, a sort of second assistant. He told production that he didn't want a professional assistant, he wanted someone who knew nothing about the set. I met him and he really liked my total inexperience. I was his assistant on the film but the production also hired a real first assistant, a tough guy who made all the call sheets and stuff, but who had to hide from Dusan.

It must have been a very unconventional production...

After two years in school working with Peter Brook and Louis Daquin, it seemed normal to me, believe it or not. All these dramatic episodes seem completely normal to me. Pierre Lhomme, who was the DP again and who hated Dusan, told me, "This isn't how things are supposed to go, this is crazy." I felt fine. Dusan was a little bit afraid of the Otto Mühl community. They refused to stay in a hotel, so they lived on the set, which was built in a garage. Dusan was tempted to sleep there and have a meal with them, but he was afraid, so he had me try it. It was terrifying.

Their performance in the movie is unbelievable.

But it wasn't only in the film. They staged everything. And because I was their only audience, they did terrible things. They wanted me to shave my head, drink my blood, eat my *beep* things like that. But, in a way, I was not afraid. Maybe because I was smoking pot. I was Dusan's assistant so I had to be there and I took it seriously. Otto Mühl didn't impress me at all. Some of the cast and crew were impressed. For me it was a great experience. What I liked was the way Dusan put people together who would probably not meet in normal life. It was like a chemical reaction. And he experienced it with great delight. That kind of fear and delight was an interesting way of making films. I never thought we were making an experimental film.

The Seventies was a time for experiences like that, I thought it was completely normal. What seemed strange to me was that people were still making films like nothing had changed. Sixty-eight was such a big change in France, like an electroshock, but it didn't immediately affect filmmaking. The directors of the Nouvelle Vague were still young. Of course Godard made that move into militant filmmaking, but he had completely disappeared. The others were just making films. No-I'm being unfair to Jacques Rivette. When I was working with Dusan, I told someone that the only person I wanted to work with was Jacques Rivette. A week later, thanks to Louis Daquin, I was taken to the set of Out One. The DP, Pierre-William Glenn, was teaching at IDHEC. When I became a professional assistant, it didn't seem so real to me, having worked with Jacques, Dusan-and Fernand Deligny, who I assisted on Ce Gamin là (75) a film about a guy who teaches autistic kids. (Deligny was a sort of French Bruno Bettelheim but with different ideas about how to raise children. He made a few films, he is famous in France. Truffaut secretly gave him a little money because he needed his advice for The Wild Child.)

I didn't see filmmaking as leading me to a professional life-it became a profession for me because I could pay my rent. But it was always in my mind that if I was going to direct a film, it would not be experimental but... Making a film had to be, not a personal experience, but an experience for the crew and the actors, something we would go through together.

As a director, do you see yourself as kind of a misfit?

I fit in my idea of cinema, sometimes there are connections. I know some people like me, and they help me to produce my films or distribute them, but I never ask them what they think about me. But me, I feel unfit. I don't like to think I am violent and sometimes bad-tempered. I hate my day when I cannot share it with the crew and the actors, and I hate a situation where I am the only one to believe in a scene. I have to convince everyone. When I cannot, I feel very bad.

Are you conscious of making films about outsiders?

But when people ask me why are they about outsiders, I cannot answer the question because it seems like a political attitude. I told you when I was working with Makavejev, I was always ready to be inside, because I never felt inside. Makavejev told me to sleep with Otto M¸hl and I wasn't afraid because I was unreachable, not because I am a pretentious person but because I have a dreamy distance with reality, which is not a really good thing.

I think it's very good for films.

But for life it is not.

Maybe not. I have always felt that your films were very difficult for me, maybe because I tend to be rational despite being drawn to the poetic or imaginative work. I look at a film and try to understand its mathematics. But that doesn't work with your film.

As an audience, I do not ask any questions of the film. The film can lead me anywhere. I can go and see any film, a good or a bad one. In Saraband, when the young girl speaks for the first time about her father and there is this flash image of the father grabbing her. It's a vision, probably not the vision of the girl, but it blew me away. I say this is the greatest thing I have seen this year. A real vision, a vision of violence, but something that doesn't tell the exact truth, because it's kind of hard to speak about the relations you have with your father. It feels like a kind of hidden consciousness. I am not able to do that. But I understand logic. I have been educated to be logical, so I know what logic is.

But you don't choose it?

No, but I don't reject it as something I don't like. I'm the opposite: if I have a discussion with someone, I would not be very tolerant with someone who has no logic.

But when you watch a film?

I ask for nothing.

Do you feel torn between the need to tell a story and the desire to go for something more abstract? It seems anything you can do on a visual level to make the film abstract like a painting, you do.

But I do it in a very honest gesture. I think when the location is right for the story in a very logical way, it's easy to film. If the location is beautiful but wrong, it doesn't work. It is very painful to choose a location because it seems good-looking during pre-production then to realize it's only good-looking. It is completely unfair to the story. Djibouti is very beautiful, but I would have never used Djibouti if it were not a territory chosen by the real Foreign Legion. It is very hot, very dry, and very spiritual place to train their guys. And I told the crew that the beauty is not the purpose for the film. You really have to forget this beauty. The work is elsewhere. When I shoot or choose a frame with Agnès, it's never aesthetic, it's always logical.

There is a very unusual shot in Beau travail, which must have been done with a very long lens, where you have the soldiers digging in the foreground and in the middle distance is the sea and then on the horizon there is sky and it's all one plane. It's like a Rothko painting.

The sound of the digging is mute because the wind blows it away. But it's not a long lens. It's a 50mm, but the heat and the dust makes a lot of smoke. The cliff and sea are in the distance, but with heat waves that kill the perspective.

That's an example of what I meant about abstraction overwhelming narrative.

Well, I have to tell you, I could have made that shot last 30 minutes. For me it is the most comical shot in the movie. You see that landscape, those stones that are lava from the volcano. It's 50 degrees [Celsius] and those 15 guys are digging solid rock. I did the film before 9/11, so at that moment I thought the Foreign Legion was of no use anymore. For me it was like Beckett. No, really. It had absolutely no aesthetic purpose. Of course when I got to the editing room, only then did I realize all the variations of blue and the mist, the waves, the heat waves, and the dust. It was staged almost.

Is abstraction in your films a device for getting us inside somebody's head? I'm thinking of the traffic jam and driving scenes in Friday Night—it all becomes a kind of a blur and it's there to keep us inside [Laure's] mind.

It's like a warning signal for her: maybe this guy is wrong for me.

And perhaps from the moment she falls asleep in the car, nothing we see really takes place. It's all a fantasy or a dream.

Maybe, yes.

He gets of the car, he walks away, she drives around for a while, then she sees him in a café. It's unbelievable except in terms of dream logic.

I would say there is something, for someone who experienced the strike of '95- Emmanuèle was inspired by those long strikes-a very strange thing happened. People meeting, falling in love, changing life. So, yes, it is the language of dream. And yet a moment like a strike creates a suspended moment. The reality suddenly changes. There was a subway strike 10 days ago in Paris. It was the end of winter and was suddenly very warm. Paris changed. People were not going to work, they were in cafés. It was something completely non-aggressive. People were smiling. But it only existed because of the strike, no subway, no buses. I was walking home and I felt something different, like something could happen. Emmanuèle was trying to convey that feeling. I play my part in it. I accentuate it even.

It's interesting that you bring up suspension because that's a consistent quality in your films—certainly from Beau travail on. This feeling of being outside time. Where that comes from and is it something you're conscious of?

I am conscious of it in my real life also. For me a good day is when I dictate time and a bad day is when time dictates me. Days when I have to do something according to time are not very creative and generate a lot of anxiety. But when I can check the time—oh, I still have one hour to do this—it's always perfect. I think I kind of give that to the characters in the films. They want be free of order. Logic is like a watch. It doesn't work so much with me. I try to free characters from that. Like the young man in Nénette et Boni works, but the dead of night belongs to him, and when Nénette intrudes on his life, the time becomes different. Because she is pregnant, she has her own time. It completely interrupts his dreamtime.

Why do you begin L'Intrus with the main character's son? Actually, not even his son, but the son's wife?

[Originally] the first scene in the script was like a monologue of a son who was unemployed, as if he was writing to his father, complaining about his lack of love and his selfishness and pleading with him to be a father. It also explained a little bit about his father's strange past. We had no time to shoot that scene because Grégoire had to accept another a film and was never able to come back. So it was supposed to begin with the son.

And then shift very radically to be being about the father.

And then the forest. Instead I put in the scene at the border with his wife. And in the original script, it did not end with Beatrice, it ended in the forest—with no people and no snow. As if it was the monologue of the son finishing. As if the whole film was contained in that monologue.

It must have been hard coping after your producer, Humbert Balsan, committed suicide before L'Intrus was released in France.

It'd never happened to me that a producer, and a friend, hung himself in his office a month and half before a film is released. I never experienced that before, and I wish I hadn't. The bank stopped everything. I couldn't get any more prints made. I had to solve everything. It was an ordeal. But it's more than that: it's a pessimistic conclusion to all those years when Humbert surfed on the wave of difficulties. He was so brave, he liked adventure. I knew him from the time when he worked with Bresson [as an actor on Lancelot du Lac], and it was always a running joke—when are we going to work together?


It's not what a film is about, it's how it is about it.

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It reminded me of "Trelawny of the Wells".

Nothing is more beautiful than nothing.

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Totally inexplicable film with no discernible beginning, middle or ending yet somehow strangely compelling. Some beautiful locations and photography and an unusual but attractive soundtrack. I gave this 7/10.

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This movie took the art of storytelling out to an abandoned parking lot and flogged it.

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FIrst, if there are those of you who have not read the brief work of Jean-Luc Nancy (L'Intrus) from which this film is based on, I would recommend it. However, I assure you that an understanding of L'Intrus by Nancy can not be achieved without a broader understanding of Nancy's work over the past 30 years. If you think you understand it having only read the one essay, you without a doubt do not understand it nor will you understand the film. All supposed understanding is a construction of your mind's own autobiographical injection into the film or assumption that any understanding is expected or desired from the filmmaker, mine as well is an assumption and that is all that is necessary (that being your own response to the film, no single one is right or wrong, no questions seeking to "get" the plot is valid--you already have it, it guides your question. Consider all "being singular-plural." The viewer of the film is exposed, open, receiving to the strangeness of the stranger's creation, therefore is intruded upon or penetrated, as we are at all times intruded upon by the Other and are all at once stranger and stranger and strangers to ourselves, and to believe in any correct interpretation of the film is to deny the strangeness of the stranger who has intruded YOU, while you viewed the film with a wrinkled brow and while you read this thinking of what to respond with, therefore I have intruded as well--I, one manifestation of the stranger. A quote from "L'Intrus" by Jean-Luc Nancy might help:

"THE INTRUDER [L'INTRUS] ENTERS BY FORCE, THROUGH SURPRISE OR RUSE, (Nancy's own capitalization) in any case without the right and without having first been admitted. There Must be something of the intrus in the stranger; otherwise, the stranger would lose its strangeness: if he is awaited and received without any part of him being unexpected or unwelcome, he is no longer the intrus, nor is he any longer the stranger. It is thus neither logically acceptable, nor ethically admissible, to exclude all intrusion in the coming of the stranger, the foreign....Hence the theme of the intrus is inextricable from the truth of the stranger. Since moral correctness [correction morale] assumes that one receives the stranger by effacing his strangeness at the threshold, it would thus never have us receive him. But the stranger insists, and breaks in [fait intrusion]. This is what is not easy to receive, nor, perhaps, to conceive....."

We assume that we must strip a film of its strangeness by finding some progression in plot, some meaning, purpose, pretension, etc., but there is always meaning, always plot, always purpose, and of course, always pretension, even in the most abstract and bizarre experiences we have including those at the cinema, for we are human. We experience those abstract and bizarre and, for some, maybe frustrating times, but without them nothing is strange, all is welcomed, all is predicted, nothing is profound. The film "L'Intrus" is what you want it to be, don't seek out answers from others. Create your own interpretation. THey are the only ones that matter. Those who assume the role of cinema's Grand Inquisitors find nothing of value. Interpretation is subjective. THis is my first and final post on any discussion board and I recommend others do the same. Say goodbye to the board and start finding your own answers. Absorb the film and let it be without the influence of others as long as you can. THat is the most genuine understanding of a film--what the individual viewer feels from the experience of the film, *beep* the rest, interpret yourself as you are through the experience of the film; make it your own.

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I was also really confused and totally unsatisfied by this movie. I agree beautiful cinematography is just not enough. I had a headache at the end from trying to figure it all out. My dogs loved it tho - my border collie sat riveted thru all the doggie scenes (half the movie) - a great movie for keeping dogs amused....but I need at least some part of it to make sense.

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Why not investigate further?

Children of Men didn't have a monkey-cam.

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Why should you have to? Should a truly great film not be able to stand alone on its own two feet?

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Some of the best films are also the most challenging, requiring a great deal of afterthought to truly be appreciated. I take you aren't a fan of David Lynch?

You commie-dupes come up with some weird fantasies about Pro-Victory Americans!

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I definitely agree with your statement. But Lynch films and other challenging films give you a window of accessibility even if in light of abstraction and/or surrealism. This movie, however, gave nothing. Take for instance the OP. He/she claimed this movie was indecipherable and unsatisfying on its own, and then you posted a long interview with the director, as though that could change the fact that the film itself did not deliver. Interviews and essays and things of that sort are good as supplements to understanding, but they can't act as a complete stand-in for understanding and appreciating a film.

A Lynch film, for instance, can stand on its own. After watching Mulholland Dr or Eraserhead, I had a very "Wow! What did I just watch" type feeling, which made me want to think more about it and view it more times. But it gave enough initially so that I could have some sort of feeling connected to the material, but not enough to have all the answers. Which is why movies of that sort give way to some really rich and provoking conversations. I couldn't tell you much of anything about this movie other than I wanted it to end as soon as possible and I'll probably not watch it again. There may be meaningful deep themes to be found in The Intruder, but those would be a result of those who have way too much time on their hands to grasp at the meagerness in this film as opposed to a genuine reflection of challenging ideas in a well-pieced, abstract puzzle.

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I wasn't as baffled as so many others seemed to be. There was more than enough to keep me afloat, so that I would gladly take the time to delve deeper. I don't have too much time on my hands, just enough.

You commie-dupes come up with some weird fantasies about Pro-Victory Americans!

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That is all fair enough. Different strokes for different folks. I am still planning on working my way through Claire Denis' work. This was my second stop (the first being Chocolat, which I enjoyed). What would you recommend going onto next? Beau travail?

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and somewhat more straightforward than The Intruder.

You commie-dupes come up with some weird fantasies about Pro-Victory Americans!

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Thanks very much. I will check it out.

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Also check out "The Werckmeister Harmonies" by Bela Tarr. A towering work.

Nothing is more beautiful than nothing.

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You like Bela? Hmm....

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[deleted]

I'll answer as best I can but I don't have all the answers.

The Russian woman arranges illegal organ harvesting. He obtained the heart of a young man seen with the Russian woman early on in the film. It's not clear to me if this young man is his son, as Played by Gregoire Colin, or not. There's a resemblance but I didn't think they were the same. This young man, who is killed for his heart, is the body found later under the ice.

He had two sons.

The dogs are companions but wild. They feel no compunction about eating human remains when forced to do so. The woman, as played by Beatrice Dalle, is a bit wolf-like herself and we see her racing like a wild animal on the sled. In that there will be comparisons to be drawn with the main character, who abandons his dogs and tries to side-step death by obtaining another's heart. He 'knows' that the heart he gets will have be acquired illegally.

A bird sings and the mountain's silence deepens.

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