The Barbarian Invasions

September 24th, 2003







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The Barbarian Invasions

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(L-R) Sylvie Drapeau, Rémy Girard, Guy Dufaux (Dir. of Photography), Francois Daigneault and Denys Arcand. Still of Marie-Josée Croze and Rémy Girard in The Barbarian InvasionsMitsou at event of The Barbarian InvasionsStill of Yves Jacques and Dominique Michel in The Barbarian InvasionsStill of Rémy Girard and Stéphane Rousseau in The Barbarian InvasionsStill of Rémy Girard in The Barbarian Invasions

Plot
During his final days, a dying man is reunited with old friends, former lovers, his ex-wife, and his estranged son.

Release Year: 2003

Rating: 7.7/10 (17,017 voted)

Critic's Score: 70/100

Director: Denys Arcand

Stars: Rémy Girard, Dorothée Berryman, Stéphane Rousseau

Storyline
In this belated sequel to 'The Decline of the American Empire', 50-something Montreal college professor, Remy, learns that he is dying of liver cancer. He decides to make amends meet to his friends and family before he dies. He first tries to made peace with his ex-wife Louise, who asks their estranged son Sebastian, a successful businessman living in London, to come home. Sebastian makes the impossible happen, using his contacts and disrupting the entire Canadian system in every way possible to help his father fight his terminal illness to the bitter end, while he also tries to reunite his former friends, Pierre, Alain, Dominique, Diane, and Claude to see their old friend before he passes on.

Cast:
Rémy Girard - Rémy
Stéphane Rousseau - Sébastien
Marie-Josée Croze - Nathalie
Marina Hands - Gaëlle
Dorothée Berryman - Louise
Johanne-Marie Tremblay - Sister Constance Lazure (as Johanne Marie Tremblay)
Pierre Curzi - Pierre Citrouillard
Yves Jacques - Claude
Louise Portal - Diane Leonard
Dominique Michel - Dominique St. Arnaud
Isabelle Blais - Sylvaine
Toni Cecchinato - Alessandro
Sophie Lorain - First Lover
Mitsou - Ghislaine (as Mitsou Gélinas)
Markita Boies - Nurse Suzanne

Taglines: A provocative new comedy about sex, friendship, and all other things that invade our lives.



Details

Official Website: Alliance Atlantis Vivafilm | Bim Distribuzione [Italy] |

Release Date: 24 September 2003

Filming Locations: Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Box Office Details

Budget: $CAD6,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: $79,650 (USA) (23 November 2003) (6 Screens)

Gross: $6,289,563 (Worldwide) (7 November 2003) (except USA)



Technical Specs

Runtime:  | Canada: (DVD version)



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Director Cameo: [Denys Arcand] the union representative whose jacket says "Directeur."

Goofs:
Continuity: When Sebastian explains to Remy what he does for a living, the collar of his shirt is alternately inside/outside his sweater between shots.

Quotes:
Rémy: We've been everything: separatists, supporters of independantists, sovereignists, sovereignity-associanists...
Pierre: At first, we were existentialists.
Dominique: We read Sartre and Camus.
Claude: Then Fanon, we became anti-colonialists.
Rémy: We read Marcuse and became Marxists.
Pierre: Marxist-Leninists.
Alessandro: Trotskyists.
Diane: Maoists.
Rémy: After Solzhenitsyn we changed, we became structuralists.
Pierre: Situationists.
[...]



User Review

Politics Aside

Rating: 10/10

I have never been a fan of Canadian cinema because it was generally soaked with the sort of contrived politically correct sexual and social attitudes of which the conformist majority was already a proponent. Thus, Canadian films tended to be "pop-Canadian-culture" films about political correctness.

Of course there were exceptions: Atom Egoyan's "Exotica" or "The Sweet Hereafter," or some of Cronenberg's more experimental films like "Naked Lunch" possessed some of that existential starkness that attracted me to those films. Nonetheless my expectations generally remained low, which is why Denys Arcand's great "Barbarian Invasions" was such a pleasant surprise.

The film is about three things: the disillusionment with socialism, the growing disillusionment with capitalism, and the death of a man who happened to have been a socialist professor in Montreal, while his son a millionaire.

Remy is dying of cancer. He is dying in a Montreal hospital, which in a five minute scene is established as the horror of socialist Canadian health care. Remy's ex-wife calls upon his estranged, well-off son, Sebastien to come visit and take care of his dying father. What follows is both a comic and a touching critique of the achievements of socialism. The film also suggests that the increasingly nihilist capitalism, or money, seems to be the only way to get around in this world. Money gets Remy out of an overcrowded ward, it gets him the most accurate medical tests and the "painkillers" he needs to survive.

But "Barbarian Invasions" is critical of both systems: there is a beautiful scene where an auctioneer visits an old Montreal priest who takes her to the basement where he apparently has statuettes and chalices he wants to sell. The girl examines them and tells him that they would be of more value to the people at the church than on the world market. The priest remarks starkly: "In other words, they are worthless." Capitalism, consequently, is as anti-spiritual as socialism was.

However, there are far more levels to "Barbarian Invasions" than mere politics. In fact, the film's goal is really to scream "Politics Aside!" so that we can make room for the man who is dying. Because Remy is not a quiet, subdued man. He is a lusty man a la Sabbath from Roth's "Sabbath's Theater" who loves life, women, wine and radical socialism. But now, that all those things are distant from him, he is forced to question his life, his relationships with his friends and his estranged children.

What follows is a profound and touching elegy to the stupidities of youth, the mistakes in life, the regret and acceptance of old age - in other words of humanity. In the end, though Remy may be disillusioned with socialism, and definitely not all-too-happy with capitalism, facing death somehow robs politics of their significance. Not to say that politics aren't significant in life, because they pervade everything we do and see and so on, but bare, unadulterated life shines through for Remy. In the end, "Barbarian Invasions" is about death, and dying with dignity and how that dignity is achieved. While neither capitalism nor socialism offer it, it can be found at a more basic, human level.

It's ironic, as a side-note, that this film came out roughly at the same time as Bertolucci's "The Dreamers," which is essentially a contemplation on the idealism and romanticism of French socialism and the "free love" culture of the 60s. I found Bertolucci's film much less profound than his greater ones - it used an affair between two siblings and an American closed off in an apartment for several days as a metaphor for the sixties. It ended rather tragically, but unrealistically - it tried to convince us that people got out from their cloistered "apartments" (read mentalities) and went to the streets to protest. What "Barbarian Invasions" tells us is that the protesters on the street were still really in that apartment, cloistered from reality.





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