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The PackageBAXTER
(1989) has naturally become something of a cult classic over the years, but one
integral element that seems to have been ignored is Ken Greenhall’s 1977
novel HELL HOUND, of which BAXTER is a fairly literal adaptation.
Although long out of print, the book is well worth seeking out, being a
provocative, compelling, powerfully original piece of work that is naturally
better known in France (where it was titled DES TUEURS PAS COMME LES AUTRES)
and England (where it was published under the pseudonym Jessica Hamilton) than
in its native country. If you’re
a fan of the film, or even if you aren’t, I’d strongly advise seeking
Greenhall’s book out--I also hope someone reprints it in my lifetime.
Say
what you like about the film’s co-writer/director Jerome Boivin, but his
literary taste is impeccable: his follow-up to BAXTER, the equally eccentric
BARJO (1992), was adapted from Philip K. Dick’s classic mindbender
CONFESSIONS OF A CRAP ARTIST. Neither
film, alas, was a huge success, which seems to have stranded Boivin in the
netherworld of French television. My
question is when is this defiantly idiosyncratic auteur going to make another
feature? I’ll definitely be
first in line! |
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The StoryBaxter is a bull-terrier who can think like a human—we known this because he voices his thoughts on the soundtrack…and they’re NOT pretty! Taken from the dog kennel where he was brought up, Baxter finds himself in the company of a lonely old woman he despises. He spends his days staring out a window at the young couple who’ve just moved in next door, wishing he could live with them. He realizes this desire when he knocks the old bag down the stairs, ending her life, and dashes across the street. Baxter’s days with the young couple are idyllic, at least before the woman becomes pregnant and gives birth to a child Baxter finds repulsive. He decides to drown the baby in a backyard pond, but barks for help too soon, inadvertently saving the kid’s life. Finding
that Baxter’s presence evokes painful memories of the accident, the couple
gives him away, and Baxter ends up in the care of a deranged boy and his
distant parents. Obsessed with
Adolph Hitler’s final days, the kid constructs a miniature bunker in a nearby
junkyard in tribute to the place of his idol’s death.
Baxter, meanwhile, takes well to the harsh, disciplined lifestyle forced
on him by his new master. Said
master meets up with a comely girl who reminds him of Eva Braun, and whose
female dog is jumped by Baxter, who can’t control his sexual impulses despite
the fact that he finds the other dog revolting.
A litter of puppies is born, but the boy kills them all, driving a wedge
between him and Baxter. Worse, he
tries to force Baxter to kill another kid scavenging in the junkyard.
Baxter will have none of it, reasoning that he only kills when
circumstances force him to. Clearly,
a boy-dog showdown is evident, a confrontation only one of them will survive. |
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The DirectionBAXTER’S
strengths are in its compellingly naturalistic atmosphere and solid
performances, particularly those of Francois Driancourt as the deranged kid,
Lise Delamare as the old lady and Maxime Leroux, who’s simply unforgettable
as the voice of Baxter. I also
liked the fantasy sequences that periodically pop up, such as the one wherein a
dead woman appears beside her widowed husband beckoning him to the beyond, and
the black and white specter of Eva Braun that haunts the boy’s dreams.
BAXTER
was a freshman effort, however, and Boivin’s inexperience is evident in the
perfunctory storytelling; the pacing is a bit too brisk for its own good, which
more often than not has the effect of reducing a complex satire on the wily
nature of evil into a sub-Monty Pythonesque exercise in gross out comedy.
The staging isn’t always up to par, either; the final boy-dog face off
in particular is a bit of a bust, an epic confrontation in the book that is
reduced onscreen to a minute or so of shouting and hurled debris.
Furthermore, the dog abuse inherent in this and other scenes looks a bit
too realistic for comfort.
What
ultimately redeems the film is its peerlessly imaginative narrative, bequeathed
from Ken Greenhall’s amazing novel. Boiven
was wise to stick so closely to it, creating something increasingly rare in
today’s movie marketplace: a totally original film. |
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Vital StatisticsBAXTER MK2
Productions Producers:
Patrick Godeau, Ariel Zeitoun Screenplay:
Jerome Boivin, Jacques Audiard (Based
on a novel by Ken Greenhall) Cinematography:
Yves Angelo Editing:
Marie-Josee Audiard Cast:
Lise Delamare, Jean Mercure, Jacques Spiesser, Catherine Ferran, Jean-Paul
Roussillon, Sabrina Leurquin, Daniel Rialet, Evelyne Didi, Remy Carpentier,
Jany Gastaldi, Francois Driancourt, Eve Ziberlin, Malcom Scannage, Lea
Gabriele, Maxime Leroux
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