home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT0687>
- <title>
- Mar. 30, 1992: Caught in a Web of Love
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 30, 1992 Country's Big Boom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 71
- Caught in a Web of Love
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard Corliss
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>TOTO LE HEROS</l>
- <l>Directed and Written by Jaco Van Dormael</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Doesn't every child sometimes feel like an orphan? In the
- dark night of the crib, didn't we imagine we were kidnapped by
- Gypsies or abandoned to the wolves? A child's bleak isolation
- and his need to find a haven in fantasy are the mind's first
- defense mechanisms. In Jaco Van Dormael's rich and rewarding
- Belgian film, young Thomas Van Hasebroeck (Thomas Godet) has
- such fears and daydreams. He believes he was switched at birth
- with Alfred, the boy next door. And he has created an alter ego,
- a secret agent named Toto, who mows down bad guys like Alfred.
- These inventions help Thomas anticipate the cruel challenge of
- adulthood, but they can't help him overcome it. Soap bubbles are
- not armor.
- </p>
- <p> Doesn't every old man, if he has outlived his family, feel
- like an orphan? Deprived of that loving touch, he relies on
- memory, a frail thing that ornaments the past and shackles him
- to it. So it is with the old Thomas (Michel Bouquet). In the
- bleak prison of a retirement home, Thomas now has only one
- animating purpose: to kill Alfred, who stole his life. Reviewing
- this life, Thomas finds it as mundane as it is painful:
- "Nothing ever happened in this guy's story." But the rest of
- Toto le Heros--which hopscotches over scenes from infancy,
- childhood and young manhood--gives the lie to this dour
- assessment. It also demonstrates, with poignancy and sharp wit,
- that there are vigorous new ways to tell an old man's story.
- </p>
- <p> As a child, Thomas has a verdant interior life; he creates
- beguiling explanations for every chapter in his family history.
- For the meeting of his father, a pilot, and his mother: "Dad's
- a plane driver. One day he fell into Mom's garden and stayed
- there." For the begetting of his older sister: "Mom smoked a
- cigarette, Dad licked Mom's hand, and that's how Alice was
- born." For his younger brother, who has Down syndrome: "Celestin
- was born in a washing machine. That's why he's funny."
- </p>
- <p> Outside, the bully Alfred taunts Thomas, goads Celestin
- and pursues Alice. Better to stay inside with a father who
- plays magical parlor tricks, a mother bountiful with her
- caresses, a sister who loves Thomas shamelessly and will defy
- death to verify her passion. Perhaps Alice (the elfin
- enchantress Sandrine Blancke) is the reason Thomas has decided
- he is only a visitor here. If he is not her brother, he can
- someday be her lover.
- </p>
- <p> So Thomas' home seems an ideal universe, a fortress
- shielding him from all the Alfreds outside. But for the young
- adult Thomas (Jo DeBacker), life is a constant adjustment to
- loss--a perpetual replaying, in ever sadder variations, of
- childhood's magnificent and terrifying dreams. He meets a woman,
- Evelyne (Mereille Perrier); because she looks like Alice, he
- must fall in love with her. Evelyne is the mature fulfillment
- of Alice's promise, yes, but she is also a photocopy, enlarged
- and a bit smudged, of his vision of Edenic sensuality. And just
- as Alice had appeared, in Thomas' jealous eyes, to flirt with
- the hated Alfred, so will Evelyne, all unawares, lure him back
- into his rival's orbit.
- </p>
- <p> In his first feature, Van Dormael, 34, shuffles Thomas'
- memories into a meld of brief, telling scenes. But the allusive
- structure is not just a director's game. It is the best way to
- present a man's life, not as it is but as it is remembered, and
- to cue us to recognize that a father's, a mother's, a sibling's
- love is a precious, imperiled gift. The movie is as complex as
- a cryptic crossword, and as direct as Celestin's greeting when
- Thomas comes to visit his retarded brother: "You're here. I'm
- happy."
- </p>
- <p> One may need a second viewing to appreciate the subtle
- artistry of the web Toto weaves around a man to whom "nothing
- ever happened." So see the movie, then stay and see it again.
- Some of life's, and the cinema's, most beautiful moments deserve
- to be relived immediately.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-