The serene, sophisticated beauty of Claire Denis’… | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

The serene, sophis­ti­cat­ed beau­ty of Claire Denis’ Chocolat

22 Apr 2018

Two people, a woman wearing a wide-brimmed hat and a man in a white shirt, standing and conversing outdoors against a blurred, natural background.
Two people, a woman wearing a wide-brimmed hat and a man in a white shirt, standing and conversing outdoors against a blurred, natural background.
The French writer/director’s debut fea­ture from 1988 is an ele­gant, per­fect­ly poised char­ac­ter study.

It seems unjust that the show­er scene in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psy­cho is com­mon­ly regard­ed as the show­er scene when there exists Isaach De Bankolé tak­ing an out­door rinse in Claire Denis’ debut fea­ture Choco­lat. This scene, quite apart from exhibit­ing male beau­ty au naturel, func­tions as a sub­tle cli­max, a syn­er­gy of form and mean­ing that illus­trates why the cen­tral rela­tion­ship, which dares not speak its own name, can­not be.

To back­track: Choco­lat is set in Cameroon dur­ing the final days of French colo­nial­ism. The film is framed and book­end­ed by the rem­i­nis­cences of the adult France (Mirelle Per­ri­er) a white woman who has trav­elled from her new home in Europe to the land of her child­hood look­ing for… Some­thing. Per­haps evi­dence of roots? It feels apt to flag that until she was sent to Paris at 14, Denis trav­elled around West African coun­tries (Burk­i­na Faso, Cameroon, French Soma­liland, Sene­gal) as her father’s civ­il ser­vant job required.

Loaded mem­o­ries form the sub­stance of this world – and what a world it is: yel­low grass, casu­al moun­tains, bustling live­stock and clothes loose enough to flap in the breezes that nip through the sub-Saha­ran heat. No one is more piv­otal in this world than Pro­tée (De Bankolé) and no one is more grace­ful­ly at ease. He is intro­duced via a clever cut. Adult France stares out the win­dow of a car. Sud­den­ly we’re in the back of a roof­less old Ford van. Straw boater-wear­ing child France (Cecilé Ducasse) sits beside an ele­gant black man whose white shirt looks so cool. The pair bounce along in com­pan­ion­able silence look­ing back at the land they are being dri­ven through.

At the wheel are France’s mum and dad. He is Marc Dalens (played by a young François Cluzet) a jovial colo­nial admin­is­tra­tor, often clad in safari suits and away on busi­ness. She is Aimée (Ital­ian actress Giu­lia Boschi) as beau­ti­ful as she is strate­gi­cal­ly cold, yet more sym­pa­thet­ic than the oth­er white French colo­nial­ists we will meet in the course of the film.

Two people, a woman with a flower in her hair and a man in a white shirt, stand together in a dimly lit room.

As for Pro­tée, he is house­boy for this small fam­i­ly, moon­light­ing as best and only friend to France. De Bankolé gives a per­for­mance that is grip­ping by virtue of phys­i­cal con­fi­dence. There is no task he can be ordered to do that he doesn’t car­ry out with con­trolled vital­i­ty. He is not cocky and he is not hum­ble. He is effi­cient. And he is beautiful.

The cam­era (in this rare instance held by Robert Alazra­ki rather than Denis’ usu­al cin­e­matog­ra­ph­er Agnès Godard) drinks in and weaponis­es the sculpt­ed male form. De Bankolé’s body is revered like an Ado­nis. His face is often a mask, as he inter­nalis­es reac­tions to increas­ing­ly trou­bling social dynam­ics, yet the regal haugh­ti­ness of his bone struc­ture telegraphs a pres­ence that silent­ly con­demns the racism all around.

Weak­en­ing before the phys­i­cal­i­ty of Pro­tée puts one firm­ly in the head of Aimée, the madam of the house. Her ver­bal rela­tion­ship with him is brisk to the point of sharp­ness. But the lin­ger­ing looks – oh, the lin­ger­ing looks. It is ini­tial­ly impos­si­ble to tell whether Pro­tée rec­i­p­ro­cates as his respon­sive­ness to her is man­dat­ed by her posi­tion of power.

Enter­ing into this domes­tic brew, in which desires go unspo­ken, and the rit­u­als of life are everyone’s focus, are a group of white French peo­ple who are strand­ed when their plane expe­ri­ences mechan­i­cal fail­ure. Duti­ful­ly, the Dalens invite them to stay. Con­ver­sa­tions and events under their roof become ugli­er, but not in a ham­my way. Denis con­tin­ues to fold into her rhythm all the glo­ri­ous land­scape shots that make this set­ting serene.

The con­trast­ing nat­ur­al beau­ty makes the human deal­ings seem all the more stark and dis­turb­ing: there is Joseph, a cof­fee planter whose rela­tion­ship with his black female ser­vant is ellip­ti­cal­ly con­veyed for what it is. There is André who won’t allow his wife to be treat­ed by the local black doc­tor. There is Luc who presents as a rad­i­cal hip­pie but whose inse­cu­ri­ties and arro­gance make him the most oppres­sive of the bunch.

It’s aston­ish­ing how ear­ly on in her career Denis had a han­dle on her dis­tinct brand of visu­al com­po­si­tion. Hers is a genius for show­ing not telling, for lay­ing out sur­faces that are rich with impli­ca­tion and for con­duct­ing details until there is a heady pic­ture that is minute­ly obser­vant with a sweep that reach­es from heav­en to hell.

Now is the time time to return to the show­er scene, which unfolds in the rel­a­tive peace before the Dalens’ house is full of unwant­ed guests, but is mir­rored lat­er, after the inva­sion. What hap­pens is a process of see­ing Pro­tée mov­ing from the con­text of his soli­tude to the con­text of his milieu. At first Pro­tée is unguard­ed, enjoy­ing the water touch­ing his body, scrub­bing him­self clean, work­ing up a foam. Aimée and France pass and Pro­tée learns of their near­ness by over­hear­ing France. His face crum­ples in anguish and he elbows a wall with a force­ful crunch.

Pro­tée’ is a name for some­thing with­in an ani­mal. In this rare glimpse of him emot­ing in pri­vate, we see him express­ing some­thing from the guts. Each of Chocolat’s most pow­er­ful and reveal­ing moments are dri­ven by phys­i­cal acts from Pro­tée, which func­tion as twists because his char­ac­ter is estab­lished as impas­sive before his oppres­sors. This show­er scene is Denis’ sophis­ti­cat­ed visu­al under­stand­ing of pow­er dynam­ics laid bare in the form of a char­ac­ter who is a mem­o­ry who is an actor. It’s a dream made real by life and cin­e­ma and Isaach De Bankolé.

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