Modern Life (2008) Poster

(2008)

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8/10
Tribute to unknown heroes
guy-bellinger29 January 2009
Before becoming the famous photographer and documentary maker he has been for decades now, Raymond Depardon had been a child. Yes, I know, this is no scoop, but the fact is that young Raymond was born into a family of farmers in Haute-Loire, an isolated region of France. His art took him to various places around the world until, ten years ago, he felt the urge to become a witness to those farmers'lives, values and family stories. Mario Ruspoli had done the same thing in the same region (the Lozère) with "Les inconnus de la terre" (1961). So why not him? All the more as he was a native son... But while roaming the world, notably falling in love with the desert, he had become estranged from the countryside of his childhood. Would he be able to give voice to these unknown heroes, who had been clinging to a rather unproductive land and had managed to survive and remain free? Well, there was no reason to be afraid, judging from this third part of the "Profils paysans" triptych. For, although the local people have no particular taste for the spoken language (they favor silence - or in a pinch monosyllables!), Depardon has a knack for bringing into the light what is lurking within them. His method could not be simpler: he just gives the interviewees ... time. He is not in a hurry (nor must we be) and, when the film ends, we finally know the protagonists like the back of our hand. Another good point is the director's choice of the 35mm format, the 2.35 aspect ratio and the Dolby sound mix. From the very first minute you get the feeling that this is no cheap movie and that the people you are going to meet are worth your attention. In the same respect, there are beautiful tracking shots following the winding roads of Auvergne and two melancholy pieces by French composer Gabriel Fauré.

In the end Depardon has reconciled with his childhood environment while the townspeople who see "La vie moderne" have with the countryside and its people they all too often disregard. A good deed indeed!
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8/10
This Hardy Breed
writers_reign3 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In 1944 the screen adaptation of Noel Coward's This Happy Breed, a work chronicling the laughter and tears of urban life in a crowded city, opened with the camera tracking across London before coming to rest in an empty house into which a new family, the Gibbons, was about to move.When their story had been told and they moved out of the house for the last time the camera reversed the process, tracking away from a once-again empty house and back the way it had come. Some 65 years on Raymond Depardon's Modern Life, a work chronicling the uneventful days of a rural existence in a sparsely populated landscape, begins with a long tracking shot - the camera mounted in a car proceeding down a narrow road - until it reaches the first of several isolated farms that will punctuate the film. When THESE stories have been told the camera reverses the opening shot i.e. tracking backward from a moving car over the same road as at the beginning. The two films, however, have more than mere symmetry in common. Both are about families, both are about change and though one is fiction and one fact the humanity in both is identical. Depardon has made a fine, warm film that is clearly not for everyone, only everyone who values truth, honesty and quality.
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4/10
it doesn't deliver.
iiigoiii5 May 2009
while this installment of the series does indeed provide some very beautiful shots of rural France and the people who are farming it, it fails on several levels.

it fails to tell the story of the farmers it's following. unless you believe that sitting around a table in an uncomfortable silence responding to excruciatingly slowly delivered, simplistic questions is a true slice of their lives.

it fails to tell a story at all, barely scratching at the surface of the problems faced by these farmers using traditional methods.

it seems more a vehicle for the filmmaker to proudly tell us repeatedly how well he knows these folks (which is not borne out by the reactions of the farmers to him or his questions), while feeding us sorrowful questions about death in preparation for the mournful, cello-stoked, backwards-view-of-life ending.
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