- Actors: Guillaume Canet, Melanie Laurent, Olivier De Benoist, Antoine Hamel, Mohamed Brikat
- Director: Christian Carion
- Writers: Christian Carion, Lauren Irrmann
- Producers: Christophe Rossignon, Philip Boeffard
- Disc Format: NTSC, Subtitled
- Language: French (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), French (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Subtitles for the Hearing Impaired: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: NR
- Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- Release Date: September 17, 2019
- Run Time: 85 minutes
At only 85-minutes, My Son doesn’t waste much time with exposition or sub-plots.
Instead, it dives right into a storyline involving the frantic actions of a
father after his son’s disappearance. This makes it a lean and effective thriller,
even if it simultaneously limits the room for creative revision of a familiar
storyline or intelligent explanations for character actions. It combines the
mystery-suspense elements from Tell No
One with the emotional impact of the separated father/son storyline of Come What May. In the end, My Son definitely feels like a Christian
Carion film, though not his best.
After his son
goes missing from a camping trip, Julien (Guillaume Canet) returns to the small
town in Eastern France , where he once lived
with his ex-wife (Mélanie Laurent) and son before abandoning them for his
career. Feeling guilty for his absence, insinuating questions from the police,
and off-handed remarks by his wife’s new boyfriend, Julien decides to take
matters into his own hands. Even when his actions land him in trouble with the
police, Julien refuses to let up until he finds his son or the people
responsible for his disappearance.
As expected from
a thriller/mystery of this sort, there are a few twists and red herrings along
the way, but the film doesn’t make time for much more. The result is a film
where a majority is spent watching Julien creeping around suspected properties,
investigating without subtlety or a solid plan. Even as the suspense is raised
near the end of the film, it shies away from any scenes of traditional action,
and the violence remains primarily off-screen. This is in no way an
exploitative film, even if there is an equally dismissive nature towards
character motivation or narrative logic. What remains at the forefront is
always the emotional impact, whether in moments of suspense or defeated
sadness.
While the
suspense is effective, the emotional effect would have been greater had the
narrative taken a bit more time to develop Julien’s character. We find out bits
and pieces about the job that has him abroad so often, but only enough to
justify some of his power in carrying out his own investigation. Had more time
been spent actually giving the audience reasons to care about Julien beyond the
simple fact that he has a missing son, the emotional impact of the film would
have been more effective.
The Blu-ray
release is not entirely necessary, as this is not a particularly flashy film
visually. The disc special features include a making-of featurette, as well as
behind-the-scenes footage with Carion and Canet.
Entertainment Value:
7/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 7.5/10
Historical
Significance: 4.5/10
Special Features: 4/10
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