Canadian filmmaker Clement Virgo has never strayed from his favorite themes: immigration, the history of black people, the family. With Brotherhis first feature film in 15 years, adapted from the eponymous book, Virgo brings all these subjects to the heart of a modern, poetic and poignant frame.
“I think a dozen different films could have been made with this book. But I chose a very specific route. This route taken by director Clement Virgo has allowed Brother (33 rpm, in French version) to be cited 14 times at the Canadian Screen Awards and to obtain a selection in the top 10 annual Toronto International Film Festival in 2022.
What is the film about? The story is based on Canadian author David Chariandy’s 2017 novel, and depicts the journey of two brothers of Jamaican descent, Francis and Michael, who grow up in a tough Toronto neighborhood in the 1990s. , the eldest, wants to free himself from a life he did not choose. The other, the more sensitive and vulnerable little brother, walks in his shadow and sees him as his model, while trying to become himself. A tragedy occurs. Their world is collapsing.
“I wanted to make a film about memory,” says Clement Virgo. Installed in front of a wall adorned with film posters, including that of Moonlight, the filmmaker has an imposing presence. Even through our computer screen, while we interview him by videoconference. “We find this idea in the book and I was interested in making a film that would approach mourning, as I felt when reading it”, he continues, explaining that he was attracted by reading Chariandy’s book by the connections what he was able to do with his own family and through the exploration of working class life.
So much for the storyline. But the way in which the story of the two brothers is told, by very precise cinematographic processes, is as important as the story itself. The director has tried to create tension, the feeling of a looming threat. “I used the lessons of the greatest, like Hitchcock or even Roman Polanski, explains Clement Virgo. With the way the camera moves, with the silences, the sounds. I wanted us to feel this sense of danger. And through it all, the story develops and you realize that not everything is what you imagine. »
While this description may give the impression that Brother is a cold film, with heavy images, a dull atmosphere, it is not so.
Clement Virgo’s film is filled with warmth. The plans are poetic. Light is exploited to create moving paintings. The filmmaker portrays his characters with a closeness that leads us into their intimacy.
Without Michael, who we see most often on screen, saying many words, we are close to his psyche from start to finish.
“Often, with stories that involve young black people, we have the impression that it has to be realistic, in the genre of cinema-vérité, almost filmed like a documentary, observes the filmmaker. But I wanted to create a beautiful and elegant world, a contemplative world. I wasn’t interested in doing something raw and visceral, but rather in illustrating the tension behind all this beauty. »
Show reality without lecturing
The brothers Francis and Michael are interpreted by the British Aaron Pierre and the Canadian Lamar Johnson, who we saw in particular in The Hate U Give And The Last of Us. Their mother, who plays a major role in the development of the story, is played by Marsha Stephanie Blake (When They See Us). The two main actors carry on their shoulders roles that Clement Virgo wanted to move away from clichés. It is about police violence, systemic racism. But that’s not what Brother recount.
“I’m interested in talking about black people’s lives, about black people’s humanity,” he says. But I don’t want to give a sermon, preach to people to teach them a lesson. Rather, I want people who see the film, if they’re not black, to experience what it is. About what it’s like when someone like Francis has to move around the world, dealing with how people see him, how he sees himself. »
I don’t want to emphasize racism or complain. I want to show something that allows people to really see these young people and feel empathy.
Clement Virgo
Clement Virgo’s approach is clear. She has been since her very beginnings, especially with the film Harsh, in 1995, presented in the Un certain regard section of the Cannes Film Festival. Already there, he tackled the neighborhood life of children of black immigrants in Canada. The themes overlap, from the relationship between two brothers to the importance of music and violence, always latent in Virgo’s cinema, but very real.
His last movie, Poor Boy’s Game, addressed racial tensions, the class struggle. Released in 2007, it preceded a long hiatus, during which Clement Virgo devoted himself to television, collaborating on series like The Get Downby Baz Lurhman, Empire Or Dahmerand also carrying out projects like The Book of Negroesan acclaimed series released in 2015.
Brother is a return to cinema for the director. “Like many people, I asked myself during the pandemic what I wanted to do with my time, he explains. I wanted something extremely personal, that would reflect my values, that would reflect how I try to understand myself and where I come from. I wanted to honor the people who got me where I am. And, above all, to make a film that would celebrate the lives of black people. »
Brother hits theaters on friday
Drama
Brother (VF 33 rpm)
Clement Virgo
With Lamar Johnson, Aaron Stone and Marsha Stephanie Blake
1:59