Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Saint Omer

The trailer for Saint Omer looked really intriguing to me so I spontaneously decided to see it at the Broadway last night.  It is an incredibly powerful and thought-provoking examination of motherhood and the immigrant experience and it is one of the best movies I've seen this year!  Rama (Kayije Kagame) is an author and professor of literature who is interested in writing a modern retelling of the Greek myth Medea.  To that end, she travels from Paris to the town of Saint Omer to cover the trial of Laurence Coly (Guslagie Malanda), a Senegalese woman accused of murdering her 15 month old daughter by leaving her on the beach to be swept away with the tide.  As the trial progresses, it is slowly revealed that Laurence fled her native Senegal because of a difficult relationship with her mother, that she stayed in a toxic relationship because she didn't have a job or anywhere else to live, that she had aspirations of studying philosophy but was prevented from doing so by her pregnancy, and that she felt lost and invisible as an immigrant in France.  It is also revealed that Rama had a difficult relationship with her Senegalese mother while growing up, that she sometimes feels that she doesn't belong in the country of her birth (in a brilliant scene of her walking through a crowd), and that she is now four months pregnant.  She begins to feel a deep connection to Laurence (shown in an incredibly poignant scene when the two women make eye contact) but not for the reason I was expecting and it culminates in an incredibly emotional moment.  I love it when my expectations are subverted!  What I found so interesting is that, even though most of the narrative takes place in the courtroom during the trial, it is not really about the trial (we don't even hear the verdict) but, rather, it is about Rama's reaction to the trial.  I also thought is was interesting that her reactions are shown with closeup shots of her face rather than with dialogue (silence is used very effectively).  Both Kagame and Malanda give compelling performances because I was absolutely riveted by the narrative despite the sparse and unadorned presentation.  This is a simple but profound film and I highly recommend it!

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