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8/10
More disturbing than hilarious
guy-bellinger17 March 2011
Suicide and Bébé (Baby), two terms that do not go together well. And this is precisely what makes the (poisonous) charm of this comic scene, signed by Louis Feuillade in 1912. It does not lie in the direction : the camera is static and the editing basic, but what is shown is unusual and... troubling. The starting point could not be simpler: Bébé's parents have one of their frequent rows but this one goes particularly wrong : beside herself, Bébé's mother decides to leave her husband. Determined not to let that happen, Bébé resorts to emotional blackmail. But the stratagem he uses is chilling : after writing a farewell letter, the little boy seizes a firearm and mimics the gestures of a desperate person about to shoot himself. He holds the gun to his head, sticks the gun into his mouth before choosing to shoot himself in the heart. Of course, this is only simulation but the gestures are so close to reality that it makes your hair stand on end. Naturally there will be a happy ending and Bébé's parents will be reunited but what if the little boy had done it for real? What about this gun within hand's reach? All that to say that this short film is less comic than unsettling. All the more as Bébé is played by a seven-year-old child, Clément Mary (later to become adult actor René Dary), whose face expressions and attitudes are those of an adult. Taking the viewers as his witness through asides and camera looks, he proves at any second more mature and clever than his parents. Seen today, 'Le suicide de Bébé' looks like an object from another planet. And quite fascinating for that matter.
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