If you are like me, who's very sensitive to noise and thinks modern films have become too loud, both in theaters and at home, then you might find Mikhaël Hers' films to your liking.
In one corner of Paris, he's been making finely-tuned, melancholic urban tales of delicate human connections since the mid 2000s. And with Amanda in 2018 and now, The Passengers of the Night, he is turning his attention to the subject of family: some surrogate, some not, and away from his usual group of 20- or 30-something protagonists.
It's not a question as to whether this change is good or bad; it's just different. With The Passengers of the Night, his usual themes of death and grief are gone, yet the sadness and melancholy still remain. Also, it takes place in Paris in the 80s, marking it his first period film.
Hers's quiet, singular filmmaking seems to attract big stars also. It features Charlotte Gainsbourg in a great role as a divorced single mother, who is discovering herself for the first time. Emmanuelle Béart, the once French megastar of 80s and 90s, also makes a welcome appearance, giving a confident, nuanced performance as a late night disc jockey. There is also a relative newcomer, Noée Abita as a beautiful drifter. Hers's regular, Thibault Vinçon, is there as a love interest as well.
The film opens with the night of the 1981 presidential election, where François Mitterrand and his Socialist party won big. There's electricity in the air and everyone's celebrating in the streets.
The title, The Passengers of the Night, is the name of a late night radio show where insomniacs and lonely souls tune in, to hear the host Vanda (Emmanuelle Béart) and talk to her on air. Her voice and wisdom are comfort to thousands of listeners.
One such fan is a recent divorcée Elizabeth (Gainsbourg). She and her two growing high school age children, Judith and Mathias, live in a penthouse apartment with windows overlooking Paris. But since her husband left, she needs to find a job pronto. It's a scary time for Elizabeth, as she never held a job before. It is alluded to that her husband left because she had breast cancer and went through a mastectomy.
Lacking any employable skills and failing badly at menial office jobs, she writes a passionate letter to Vanda, and lands her a job at Vanda's radio station as a switchboard operator. Her job is to filter the listeners' calls, then connect them to Vanda on air. She and the team hit it off. Her daughter Judith is a firebrand and very into progressive politics, but her young son, Mathias is struggling in school and is rather directionless.
One night, a young drifter and a listener of the show named Talula (Noée Abita) shows up at the station. It turns out she doesn't have anywhere else to go. Elizabeth ends up bringing her to her flat and letting her stay in her spare room in the attic.
Soon Mathias falls hard for the stunning drifter. They go to the movies, an activity that Talula says she does a lot because the movie theater is good place to go when the weather turns cold. There are hints of young people's passions and interests forming, foreshadowing their future path. But when Mathias gets too close, Talula leaves.
It's 1988. Working at a library during the day, Elizabeth finds a new love in a younger man (Vinçon), Judith has moved out, and Mathias now works at a local pool. One day, Elizabeth and Mathias find Talula passed out near their apartment. She has become a junkie. They help her from the goodness of their hearts, like before. Talula struggles with her addiction while Elizabeth and Mathias prepares to move out of the fancy apartment they've been calling home.
Hers has perhaps the gentlest touch of all French directors working today. Shot dreamily hazy with a mix of film and digital images, The Passengers of the Night combines the director's penchant for good music -- the 80s in this case: Lloyd Cole & The Commotions, The Pale Fountains, Television, Low -- and also pays tribute to 80s romantic cinema shot in the streets of Paris, such as Eric Rohmer's Full Moon in Paris, Jacques Rivette's Le pont du nord, and one of my early favorites during my formative years, Eric Rochant's The World without Pity.
No one dies and nothing drastic happens in The Passengers of the Night, but as usual, Hers quietly observes life's ups and downs, and connections that people make along the way. Gainsbourg is luminous as Elizabeth, giving a fine-tuned performance as a middle-aged woman finding herself in a changing world.
Watching this film reminded me very much of Hou Hsiao Hsien's Tokyo-set Ozu tribute, Cafe Lumiere, in terms of its tone and place.
The Passengers of the Night opens June 30 at IFC Center in New York, with a national rollout to follow, via KimStim. Visit the official site for more information.
Dustin Chang is a freelance wrtier. His musings and opinions on everything cinema and beyond can be found at www.dustinchang.com