Gamma rays | Probing the soul of Saint-Michel





For one summer, teenagers from Saint-Michel wander through their multicultural neighborhood and face the big questions that the transition to adulthood entails.



Fifteen years later West of Plutodirected with Myriam Verreault, Henry Bernadet once again plunges into an adolescent microcosm on the occasion of his second feature film, Gamma rays. If his previous work was interested in the daily life of young suburbanites, this one focuses more on those of the Saint-Michel district, in Montreal.

And what is so different about these two collections of characters? That of Saint-Michel discusses cultural identity, suffers from systemic racism and comes up against the vagaries of immigration. But not only. It is also about electromagnetics, philosophy and great moral dilemmas (“Is it worse to cheat on your girlfriend or your barber?”)…

Filmed in an almost documentary style, this refreshing proposition invites us into the daily lives of Fatima (Chaimaa Zinedine), Toussaint (Chris Kanyembuga) and Abdel (Yassine Jabran), the three vectors of this skillful choral film. While Abdel tries to endure his cousin visiting Montreal, Fatima sets out to move away from crime, which nevertheless allowed her to envisage a rich destiny. Toussaint, for his part, maintains a telephone correspondence with a mysterious Laval resident, whose number was found in a bottle washed up on the banks of the Rivière des Prairies.

Co-written with Isabelle Brouillette and Nicolas Krieff, the screenplay for Gamma rays suffers from inconstancy. The transition from lively dialogue to conventional and unnatural replies destabilizes and lessens our enthusiasm. The calls between Toussaint and Maude, for example, sometimes give the impression of being nothing more than a collection of meaningless sentences, exchanged by two strangers whose origins of the emotional connection escape us.

Nevertheless, there are also real gems in this film, sensitively supported by non-professional actors who do an excellent job. The bold narrative structure, articulated around the symbolic reference to gamma rays, leads to a profound reflection on the invisible bonds that human beings weave between them and on the impact of social and family dynamics on adolescents.

As a spiritual sequel toWest of Pluto, Gamma rays is a captivating fresco about adolescence that does justice to the complexity of this time of life. And which stays far away from the caricatured representations that are too often reserved for young people.

Gamma rays

Drama

Gamma rays

Henry Bernadet

With Chaimaa Zinedine, Chris Kanyembuga, Yassine Jabrane, Hani Laroum, Océane Garçon-Gravel

1:39 a.m.
Indoors

7/10


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