Artikel "La vie de bohème" (Desson Howe)
1993.11.05 Washington Post / Desson Howe
La vie de bohème
Nothing actually "happens" in an Aki Kaurismäki film. But things emerge - deadpan, funny things. You have tobecome accustomed to the movie's low blood pressure, its subtly satiric rhythms.
The Finnish director has an exact target in mind, the niche between pathos and true poignance. His characters seem subdued, even hypnotized, but they're single-mindedly aware of the grim existence around their necks. The effect is funny, but not whoopingly campy. Their personal pain is too real and involving to push them into that zone.
In La vie de bohème, Kaurismäki's slow-and-steady mood piece about artistic squalor in Paris, all of these things come into signature play.
Based on the same 19th-century novel (Henri Murger's Scènes de la vie de bohème) that inspired Puccini's opera, the story is about three down-and-out losers doomed to penury and artistic obsession. There's Albanian painter Rodolfo (Matti Pellonpää), playwright Marcel (André Wilms) and composer Schaunard (Kari Vaananen).
Their problems are exactly the same: no rent or food money and the futile struggle to be recognized. It doesn't help Marcel that he refuses to reduce his 21-act play to commercial size or that the chances of Schaunard's latest work making it (it's called The influence of blue on art) seem remote.
The story - by Kaurismàki's disingenuous admission - is intentionally awful and meandering. But it's regularly interrupted by the mutely amusing - or the sad. Enter, for instance, rich gentleman Jean-Pierre Leaud (François Truffaut's erstwhile leading man), who commissions a self-portrait from Rodolfo. While Leaud poses, playwright Marcel, pretending to hang up the client's tuxedo jacket, uses it for a job interview. He gets the job and brings the jacket back just in time (actually, he's about 10 excruciating seconds late).
An affair between Rodolfo and Mimi (Evelyne Didi), a quiet, constantly perturbed woman, becomes very real, particularly when poverty (and Rodolfo's eviction by the immigration authorities) forces them apart. She eventually returns but they have to face her tubercular future together.