Bérénice

  • 105'
  • France
  • 1983
Abandoning his project of filming the collected works of Racine on Super 8, Ruiz produced this remarkable piece of 'theatre on film' in collaboration with the Avignon Festival. On screen, the absolutely remarkable actors read the text, nothing but the text, and almost all the text of Bérénice. The light modernisation does not turn it into a pretext for a familiar Ruizian rebus. He opts for, simultaneously, great unity and great richness: every scene invents a new effect, a new way to play the scene, but the aesthetic of shadow and light gives it overall unity.Ruiz chose Bérénice precisely because it is the only Racine tragedy that doesn't end in slaughter. And yet the characters are presented as spectres, 'dead souls'. This beyond-the-grave ambience relates to an ambiguity some have detected in Racine: the possibility that the characters are already dead. If one takes play and film together, everything occurs as if the drama has already played out, and we are witness to its post-mortem re-presentation.Bérénice is about an impossible meeting, impossible harmony: a tragedy of closing doors. Ruiz's typical intellectualism is ghosted here by an unexpected lyricism; rarely has his work attained such heights of emotion. -Olivier Curchod
  • 105'
  • France
  • 1983
Director
Raúl Ruiz
Country of production
France
Year
1983
Festival Edition
IFFR 2004
Length
105'
Medium
16mm
Language
French
Producers
Films du Dimanche, Festival d'Avignon
Screenplay
Raúl Ruiz
Cinematography
François Ede
Cast
Jean Badin
Director
Raúl Ruiz
Country of production
France
Year
1983
Festival Edition
IFFR 2004
Length
105'
Medium
16mm
Language
French
Producers
Films du Dimanche, Festival d'Avignon
Screenplay
Raúl Ruiz
Cinematography
François Ede
Cast
Jean Badin