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Analysis: Confession of a Child of the Century

<p>Sylvie Verheyde’s 2012 film&comma; <em>Confession of a Child of the Century<&sol;em>&comma; based on Alfred de Musset’s 1836 semi-autobiographical novel&comma; tells the tragic love story of Octave and Brigitte set in 19<sup>th<&sol;sup> Century France&period; Octave&comma; a young aristocrat and self-described libertine played by English musician Pete Doherty&comma; falls in love with an older widow&comma; Brigitte&comma; played by Charlotte Gainsbourg&period; Having been left by his fiancé at the beginning of the film&comma; Octave obsessively pursues Brigitte&comma; eventually convincing her that his love for her is genuine&comma; and not merely a defect of his youth&comma; as she initially believes&period; Brigitte is more reticent of this new relationship&comma; and spurns Octave’s advances&comma; before eventually giving in to her feelings for him&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; the relationship turns sour as a result of their melancholic nature&comma; Octave’s affinity for partying&comma; and Brigitte’s interest in another man&period; The characters&comma; particularly Octave&comma; seem to embrace without question the belief that life is inherently meaningless&comma; however they throw themselves completely into their romantic relationship as the only beacon of hope&period; Love and the associated emotions are all that give life meaning for Octave and Brigitte&period; But as the film purports&comma; love is transitory&comma; even illusory&comma; therefore life is still fundamentally meaningless to the characters&period; When love is lost&comma; or revealed to be untrue&comma; the characters fall into complete despair&period; The film&comma; reflecting the tone of its source material&comma; borrows heavily from the style of the Romantic period&comma; while also embracing the seemingly contradictory view that love does not exist&comma; and life is ultimately meaningless&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Alfred de Musset’s original novel&comma; <em>La confession d&&num;8217&semi;un enfant du siècle<&sol;em>&comma; is a prime example of the literature of the Romantic period&comma; largely through its emphasis on human relations&comma; emotions&comma; and an overwhelming sense of melancholy&period; Despite the latter quality&comma; the central character of the story &lpar;based on Musset himself&rpar; ultimately comes to a place of hope&comma; despite many hardships along the way&period; He traverses chaotic relationships&comma; questions his purpose&comma; suffers greatly&comma; but in the end&comma; discovers his belief in God&period; In keeping with many of the themes of Romantic literature&comma; Musset praises the individual&comma; and sees the beauty of nature and love as a reflection of God&period; However&comma; Verheyde’s film adaptation takes a different approach&comma; both in style and tone&period; While Octave narrates the story&comma; his character is portrayed &lpar;both physically and through his words&rpar; as an eternally depressed and listless man&period; He drinks to excess and hates his own nature&comma; but also exalts himself as a young man who is wise beyond his years&period; He recognizes his own temperament&comma; which he refers to as the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;disease of the century&comma;” as he believes it has afflicted his entire generation&period; Octave describes this disease as&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"padding-left&colon; 30px&semi;">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;A feeling of inexpressible discomfort &lbrack;that&rsqb; began to ferment in all young hearts&period; Sentenced to idleness and boredom&comma; the anxiety of death wormed its way into their soul&period; If it was tantamount to a negation of all things&comma; then one can call it disenchantment or desperation&comma; if one prefers&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is this disenchantment with life that initially leaves Octave in despair&semi; a despair that he believes can only be cured with love&period; But even as he seeks love&comma; he is dubious of the concept&period; Having lost the woman that he thought to be his one true love&comma; Octave proclaims that he &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;no longer believed in the possibility of loving&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; soon after this proclamation&comma; Octave meets Brigitte&comma; and quickly develops an intense attraction to her&period; He simultaneously embraces this newfound love while dismissing the authenticity of love outright&period; During a walk through the woods with Brigitte&comma; Octave states that he &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;believe&lbrack;s&rsqb; in nothing” but wishes to die loving her&period; He later advises her&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;If you have a passionate soul&comma; I&&num;8217&semi;ll tell you straight off&comma; love doesn&&num;8217&semi;t exist&period; Just throw yourself headlong into the world&period;” It is this seemingly paradoxical view that permeates the film&period; Octave is both a believer in nothing and a hopeless romantic&comma; chasing love&comma; and attributing meaning to life only through its association with love&period; These qualities are common in the Romantic philosophy&comma; which wholly embraces the often transitory and even contradictory emotions of the individual&period; It is this paradoxical theme that gives rise to the constant battle in the relationship between Octave and Brigitte&colon; reconciling a belief in nothing with intense feelings of love&period; This is further exemplified when Octave proclaims&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I do not believe anything&comma; except that you are beautiful&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><img class&equals;"wp-image-201 aligncenter" src&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;50&period;116&period;64&period;30&sol;~philosy4&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2016&sol;11&sol;doherty&lowbar;2420542b-1&period;jpg" alt&equals;"doherty&lowbar;2420542b" width&equals;"674" height&equals;"421" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is also important to note that the visual style in <em>Confession of a Child of the Century<&sol;em> works in tandem with the tone of the source material to intensify the ennui of the lead characters&period; While the costumes and settings all work to recreate an authentic image of 19<sup>th<&sol;sup> Century France&comma; the color scheme is noticeably washed out to reflect Octave and Brigitte’s underlying sadness&period; It also works to foreshadow the relationship&&num;8217&semi;s demise&comma; even at times of pure joy and ecstasy&period; In scenes where Octave and Brigitte lie in bed together&comma; professing their love for each other&comma; the mis en scene is simple&comma; and the colors are faded and lifeless&comma; with primarily gray tones&period; The actor’s performances are also reserved&comma; with the influence of the image speaking for their emotions&period; Pete Doherty narrates dryly over the image&comma; and the audience is left with a similar feeling of listlessness as the camera floats from one gray scene to the next&period; Even the French countryside appears dead and decaying&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Rather than adopting the conclusion of the source material&comma; the film adaptation of <em>Confession of a Child of the Century<&sol;em> chooses to allow the characters to wallow in perpetual misery&comma; devoid of any real answers or knowledge to cling to&period; While Octave and Brigitte’s relationship starts with their physical and emotional attraction to one another&comma; quickly becoming intensely passionate&comma; it soon devolves into an ugly and jealous affair&period; Octave&comma; ostensibly addicted to his former activities before meeting Brigitte&comma; continues to drink and party&comma; enjoying the company of prostitutes while still professing his love for Brigitte&period; Alternatively&comma; Octave discovers Brigitte’s journal&comma; and reads aloud her confessions about another man for whom she has harbored strong feelings&period; Octave&comma; knowing that he has also been unfaithful&comma; feels betrayed but decides to dismiss it and reconfirm his love for her&period; However&comma; Brigitte&comma; having increasingly strong feelings for this other man&comma; begins to distance herself from Octave&comma; and wavers on whether or not to leave the country with him&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is at this point that Brigitte confronts Octave&comma; questioning the sanity of their relationship&comma; and ultimately decides&comma; with much difficulty&comma; that they cannot be together any longer&period; During this final confrontation&comma; they both question if love is something worthy of their pursuit&comma; and Brigitte implores Octave that&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;you have to decide&comma; either love is a good thing&comma; or it is evil…if it is good&comma; you must believe in it…if it is evil&comma; you must recover from it&period;” When they are both faced with their own lack of belief in any meaning&comma; they come to realize that their relationship is doomed for failure&period; As they cannot reconcile their emotions with their own nihilism&comma; they are left to wallow in misery&comma; unable to cultivate their love for one another&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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