Dir. Costa-Gavras. France. 2024. 110 minutes
It’s hardly a shock {that a} movie about dying may come throughout as considerably lugubrious, however The Final Breath – a meditation on healthcare and mortality from veteran director Costa-Gavras – may maybe have breathed a bit of extra evenly. Primarily based on a ebook by thinker Régis Debray and palliative care specialist Claude Grange, the movie dramatises a variety of questions on bodily vulnerability, dying and methods to confront the human situation; however from the beginning, it comes throughout extra like a soberly dramatised seminar than as an emotionally evolving fiction.
Extra like a soberly dramatised seminar than an emotionally evolving fiction
Denis Podalydès and Kad Merad, primarily taking part in variations of Debray and Grange, supply considerate solidity on the head of an illustrious solid that features Angela Molina, Charlotte Rampling, Hiam Abbass and Karin Viard. However regardless of authoritative performances, the movie by no means actually comes alive. It could be thought-provoking in its content material, however is extra more likely to discover its area of interest as an academic device than as a cinematic proposition.
French display screen common Podalydès – as so typically, embodying the typical apprehensive man – performs eminent thinker Fabrice Toussaint, first seen having an MRI scan in Boston, with regarding outcomes. Again in France, he has one other test, and meets Dr Augustin Masset (Merad), a specialist in palliative healthcare. Realizing that Toussaint is serious about end-of-life questions – he has a ebook on the theme, about to be republished – Masset proposes giving him a tour of his hospital, letting him sit in on conferences and recounting assorted anecdotes about his expertise with most cancers sufferers and the imminence of dying.
Among the many embedded tales are episodes involving a rich lady (Charlotte Rampling) decided to take management of her demise; a younger lady (Agathe Bonitzer) raging towards her situation; and a affected person (Nouvelle Obscure stalwart Alain Libolt, a peppery standout) and his spouse (Hiam Abbass), each in a state of livid denial. A very spectacular efficiency comes from Françoise Lebrun, additionally notable in one other current death-musing drama, Gaspar Noé’s Vortex; right here she performs a reconciled affected person, who enjoys a dialog with Toussaint about completely different spiritual variations of the afterlife.
A extra boisterous episode options Angela Molina as a lady who arrives in hospital along with her giant Romany household and accompanying jazz musicians. Merad – who not too long ago appeared in one other veteran director’s musing on mortality, Lastly by Claude Lelouch – contributes reassuringly bearlike gravitas because the pensive, ethically grounded medic.
Regardless of makes an attempt at dramatisation – typically vigorous, extra typically downright dogged – the movie comes off as an earnest talkathon, its dialogue spiked with philosophical and literary references (Houellebecq, Lacan, François Mauriac et al), to not point out theological allusions to notions like metempsychosis and palingenesis. One scene particularly, wherein Toussaint and a circle of media varieties talk about a potential TV programme on the theme, is very laborious, and the overemphasis on his standing as an immediately recognisable movie star thinker is a carrying mannerism.
Costa-Gavras made his status as grasp of the political thriller with movies comparable to Z and State Of Siege however, whereas he sustains a notice of considerate seriousness all through, there’s little dramatic urgency right here. Nonetheless, the heavyweight content material in itself is more likely to immediate viewers to take a position on their very own most well-liked model of a ‘good dying’ – though most of us would most likely desire to not exit accompanied by a twee youngsters’s tune about snails.
Manufacturing firm: KG Productions
Worldwide gross sales: Playtime, joris@playtime.group
Producers: Michèle Ray-Gravas, Alexandre Gavras
Screenplay: Costa-Gavras, primarily based on the ebook by Claude Grange and Régis Debray
Cinematography: Nathalie Durand
Manufacturing design: Catherine Werner Schmit
Enhancing: Costa-Gavras, Loanne Trevisan
Music: Armand Amar
Major solid: Denis Podalydès, Kad Merad, Marilyne Canto, Angela Molina, Charlotte Rampling, Hiam Abbass, Alain Libolt, Agathe Bonitzer