Review by
Ren Zelen
Directed by: Quentin Dupieux
Starring: Jean Dujardin, Adèle Haenel, Albert
Delpy, Coralie Russier, Pierre Gommé, Caroline Piette
Written and directed by Quentin Dupieux, Deerskin is a
black, not to say bleak, comedy about obsession, here concerning a man who
develops an inexplicable and unhealthy mania regarding a second-hand
deerskin jacket.
The versatile Jean Dujardin - the suave, dapper lead in the silent
musical comedy The Artist - plays a character about as
far removed from that particular role as is possible. Here he plays Georges,
an inept loser and liar who travels miles into the remote mountains of
France simply to view a second-hand jacket he has seen advertised for
sale.
When he tries the jacket on he is immediately smitten by his own
reflection. "Killer style," he whispers to himself, even though it clearly
isn’t. The jacket is a 1980s dated, ill-fitting, fringed, tan-suede
creation, and the fact that Georges thinks he looks great is the first
indication that he might not be entirely rational. The jacket is too short
for his large frame and looks ridiculously out of place with his business
shirt and trousers.
Georges however, is ecstatic, and pays well over the odds, handing over
most of his cash for the jacket which he is told is 100 percent deerskin.
The seller can’t believe his luck, disposing of his rather outmoded specimen
for a princely sum, so he gifts George with an old model camcorder as an
"extra bonus."
Instead of returning home, Georges continues on to an isolated guest house
where he checks in for an indefinite period. He tells the desk clerk that
his credit card isn’t working and he’s spent his cash on the jacket so he
agrees to leave his wedding ring as collateral until he can pay. The
mountain hotel Georges seeks out certainly hasn’t had a refit for 30 years
and its creaking fixtures and drab décor are the perfect setting for Georges
and his jacket. It transpires that we might be in the present, but Georges
has got stuck somewhere in the past. He talks about fax machines, has no
concept of computers and ditches his mobile phone.
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It transpires that his wife has thrown him out, and that he’s been blocked
from his bank account, which throws him into the first of many rages. It
seems like Georges' life has gone off the rails and he may be playing out
some existential masculine midlife crisis.
He finds consolation in his jacket and takes some pleasure in filming
himself posing in it with the "bonus" camcorder. When he gets into
conversation with the waitress and sole occupant of the empty local bar they
ask him what he does for a living. Stuck for an answer, he pretends that
he’s a filmmaker - after all, he has a camera.
The bartender’s name is Denise (Adèle Haenel) and as chance would
have it, she wants to be a film editor. She has practiced the art on her own
computer by re-editing Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction, which she chose to put into chronological order - "It sucked!" she
declares.
Georges offers her the job of editing the footage he is currently shooting,
if she could only see her way to forwarding him some finance - he insists
that his "producers and film crew can’t send him further money for the
production as they are stranded filming on a glacier in Siberia."
Sceptical at first, Denise is convinced when he hands her all his footage.
Unsurprisingly, she thinks Georges must be making a weird, avant-garde
satire and cleans out her account to bankroll the film, despite his frequent
slip-ups regarding the filmmaking and editing process.
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However, the jacket increases its hold on Georges as a fetish object and it
isn’t long before it develops a personality of its own and begins to
converse with him. They are made for each other, it seems, and they share
the same dream - the jacket confesses its desire to be the only such garment
in the world and Georges is equally keen to become the only person entitled
to wear such a garment and to display its "killer style."
Georges uses Denise’s money to buy more film but also gradually acquires
additional items of deerskin clothing, often in rather random ways - a hat,
boots, fringed pants (a gift from Denise), eventually gloves. He is destined
to wear deerskin.
As they say, ‘clothes maketh the man’ and the more clothed in deerskin
Georges becomes, the more determined he is to create film for Denise to edit
and to escalate his mission to rid the world of jackets and their wearers by
any means necessary - he has to be the only one to fully embody that "killer
style."
Writer/director Dupieux seems to enjoy creating ridiculous situations where
characters go to extreme lengths (see his previous outings
Rubber and Wrong), and Deerskin certainly falls into the same category.
Deerskin is a skewed fable with one joke which serves as a
parallel between Georges's maniacal jacket obsession and the ego and
single-minded vision which it takes to become a filmmaker.
Dupieux manages to sustain unpredictability throughout the snappy run time
of only 77 minutes. Dupieux is aided by the performance of his leading
actors, Dujardin and Haenel, who lead us through a series of improbable
developments with a conviction so deranged it’s even amusing when it
shouldn’t be.
Deerskin is in UK/ROI cinemas from
July 16th.