Bertrand Bonello at the FNC | Something cinematic

At the Festival du nouveau cinéma to receive an honorary Louve of honor for his entire career and to be the subject of a retrospective, French filmmaker Bertrand Bonello will also offer a master class this Thursday, and his new feature film, The beast.




From his first feature film, Something organic (1998), low-budget film shot in 15 days, until The beast (2023), which is due to be released in Quebec at the beginning of next year, via Saint Laurent (2014), his most expensive film and greatest career success, Bertrand Bonello remains an essential figure in cinema. He is recognized for his formal research, the audacity of his staging and his desire to create in complete freedom.

“For me, it’s unthinkable to tackle a script if I don’t have an idea of ​​the direction, of the form. What matters is not just the subject, the story, the characters, it’s what the form of the film will be. When I start to have the shape of the film in mind, then I can start writing,” confides the director I met the day before his master class.


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

Bertrand Bonello

“I hate the name master class because it puts you in a position where you’re supposed to know things, whereas for me, I really have the impression that the more I advance, the less I know. I prefer the word encounter. »

Nothing predestined Bertrand Bonello to become a filmmaker. A classically trained musician – he also wrote the music for his films – he loved cinema “like everyone else”. It was only at the age of 24, while he was a studio musician and accompanied artists on tour, including Carole Laure and Françoise Hardy, that he questioned his future and decided to explore new territory. .

“I threw myself into it and fell in love with cinema and making films,” confides the self-taught filmmaker. My daughter studies cinema at Concordia and I see the nature of the courses; we learn things technically and theoretically, we learn the history of cinema. Maybe the fact of not having gone to school didn’t shape me and gave me the freedom to create. »

It was as a teenager, during the golden age of video clubs, that Bertrand Bonello’s interest in cinema, particularly genre cinema, began. Without questioning the quality of the films he rented, he watched a lot of horror films from the late 1970s and early 1980s, such as those by George Romero, David Cronenberg and Dario Argento.

“Rewatching these films later, I realized that they were great directors and that they had a very first-degree approach to genre cinema. It was a way of portraying their fear of the world through a cinema of fear. I find that genre cinema has two virtues. First, it is made for staging; there are no good genre films without good direction. Then, it allows us to say things quite directly about the state of the world by using biases and metaphors. »

“The end of a cycle”

At only 55 years old, Bertrand Bonello is preparing to receive a Louve d’or for his entire career and to be the subject of a retrospective: “It sure feels a little strange, but as I begin the retrospective, I feel that it is the end of a cycle. Something organic is a very small film that I shot in Montreal, then I shot all my films in Paris, except Zombie Child where I went to Haiti. I have made very French films, including Saint Laurent And The Apollonides – brothels in the 19th centurye century, it’s very Parisian. I think I really toured Paris, something French. »


PHOTO CAROLE BETHUEL, PROVIDED BY THE FESTIVAL DU NOUVEAU CINÉMA

George MacKay and Léa Seydoux in The beast

The other element which marks the end of a cycle for the filmmaker is The beast, an anticipation film mixed with horror told in three parts which stars Léa Seydoux and George MacKay. While he tells the story of an actress wanting to purify her DNA, the filmmaker reflects on artificial intelligence. When he was writing the script, he was far from imagining that the subject would take up so much space in the news.

“I started writing The beast four or five years ago, but I stopped to shoot Coma And Zombie Child because the film was very hard to write, very hard to finance. He experienced a lot of scheduling problems because of COVID-19, then there was the death of Gaspard Ulliel, who was to play there. I think that The beast, It’s a bit of a culmination of a lot of things I’ve done. It is a sum, in fact, which closes something. And then?… I don’t know. »

Bertrand Bonello’s master class is presented at the Cinémathèque québécoise this Thursday at 5:30 p.m.

The film The beast is presented at the Cineplex Quartier Latin, Sunday, October 15, at 7:30 p.m.

Bertrand Bonello – Program 1: Cinema Identity(s), at the Cinémathèque québécoise, Saturday, October 14, at 3 p.m.

Bertrand Bonello – Program 2: Music, art and dance, at the Cinémathèque québécoise, Saturday, October 14, at 4:30 p.m.


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