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What's brilliant and fresh about this film is its detachment from emotion, and brutal honesty. The dialogue in Bastards, particularly from the character Marco, is only the bare essentials - there's little room for verbal flourishes in this dark dramatic-thriller. Visually, the film possesses that same honesty as characters live and breathe as normal humans - there is very little that feels staged or simulated, which is special and exciting. In the same way, there are some very graphic and disturbing moments that take place on the screen - and in one case, a moment that is visually hinted at that is so horrifying that we hope to never see it but end up being forced to endure it. However, the absolute final scene of the film is troubling in a few different ways (I won't give away what happens), but it feels unnecessarily provocative in comparison to the subdued and matter-of-fact stylings of all the scenes that lead up to it - even the music is different.
To accent this dark and brooding thriller is crisp digital photography (this being Claire Denis' first film to shoot digitally). There is no sign in quality that this is the case, but the film appears as though only natural and available light was used, but this particular style enhances the raw nature of the screenplay (co-written by Claire Denis and Jean-Pol Fargeau). Some of the dialogue feels clunky at times (though it may have been a strange subtitle translation that might take some looking into by its US distributor Sundance Selects), but beyond that the dialogue and moments between Marco and Laporte's wife are mesmerizing in their authenticity.
Though Bastards has its imperfections, it's a breath of wicked fresh air that has been lacking from cinema this year. The core set of characters are like grounded versions of people you would encounter in a David Lynch film, and it's that real-life quality that makes them (and the situations) even more frightening.
My ranking: 4/5 stars
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2821088/
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