The Treatment | Little White Lies

The Treat­ment

21 Aug 2015 / Released: 21 Aug 2015

A bearded man in a dark suit holding a torch in a dimly lit room.
A bearded man in a dark suit holding a torch in a dimly lit room.
3

Anticipation.

Sounds like therapy.

4

Enjoyment.

Mo Hayder meets Marc Dutroux, bleak yet restrained.

4

In Retrospect.

Paedophilia-themed thriller on the trauma of surviving.

This har­row­ing Bel­gian noir thriller explores the sub­ject of pae­dophi­la with great verve and tact.

Hans Her­bots’ The Treat­ment is a film about pae­dophil­ia, but although it fea­tures a wood­land set­ting (that famil­iar locus of fairy­tale hor­ror) and a creepy crim­i­nal mythol­o­gised by local chil­dren as the troll’, every­thing is root­ed in the stark real­ist shades of mod­ern noir, down to its griz­zled, down­beat tec relent­less­ly pur­su­ing his sick quar­ry in an attempt to exor­cise ghosts from his own past.

The detec­tive is Chief Inspec­tor Nick Cafmey­er (Geert Van Ram­pel­berg), whose younger broth­er dis­ap­peared 25 years ear­li­er when they were still both chil­dren, and who has ever since been taunt­ed about his sibling’s grim fate by Ivan Plet­tinckx (Johan Van Ass­che), the age­ing pae­dophile who, though the chief sus­pect in the case, could nev­er be con­vict­ed. Now Cafmey­er is inves­ti­gat­ing anoth­er case of bizarre child abduc­tion and grows con­vinced that Plet­tinckx knows some­thing. But as the police­man gets clos­er to one truth, he keeps get­ting fur­ther away from another.

The Treat­ment is based on the Eng­lish 2001 best­seller by Mo Hay­der, but has been trans­plant­ed to Bel­gium where the case of that nation’s most noto­ri­ous pae­dophile and child mur­der­er Marc Dutroux casts a long shad­ow, haunt­ing sev­er­al key ele­ments of the plot. This is a bleak, intense film about the most har­row­ing of crimes, show­ing the way that they can ram­i­fy and rip­ple through time. It is also a film about acts utter­ly uncon­scionable, even unimag­in­able, which Her­bots expert­ly out­lines with­out ever drift­ing into over-explic­it­ness or sen­sa­tion­al­ist excess.

In place of shock, we get shame: the shame of Cafmey­er, nev­er able to find, let alone save, his baby broth­er; the dif­fer­ent kind of shame expe­ri­enced by the troll’s sur­viv­ing vic­tims, left to live with the tru­ly hor­rif­ic choic­es that they have made; and the shame of a nation that has unwit­ting­ly har­boured abject atroc­i­ty in its midst. Most of all, though, The Treat­ment presents us with a dogged­ly obses­sive char­ac­ter repeat­ed­ly being told that he must learn to let go, and then con­fronts us with the trag­ic con­se­quences of that very les­son. It plays like an ago­nis­ing­ly pow­er­ful plea nev­er to forget.

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