Dog Soldiers

If the goal with the self reflective JCVD was to recreate the public image of aging action star Jean Claude Van Damme, then you may consider that mission a success. If the goal was to announce to the world that sophomore feature director Mabrouk El Mechri is a truly world class talent, then you may also consider that mission a success. If the goal was to skewer celebrity-obsessed culture while laying out the toll it takes on those on the receiving end of the idol worship, then - yep - that’s another one in the success column.
That JCVD is able to show you a new face to its star and subject at all makes it a major accomplishment. That it does so with such an incredible sense of style, insight, and pure entertainment value makes it a revelation. Ladies and gentlemen, after spending decades turning out lowest-common-denominator action pictures Jean Claude Van Damme has just made a truly great film. No matter what criteria you may use to judge it - scripting, cinematography, humour, action, even dramatic performance - JCVD is one remarkable piece of work. Yes, I flat out love this film.
The premise, at this point, should be familiar to regular readers of this site. Jean Claude Van Damme, aging star of direct to video low budget action films, is returning home to Belgium after a lengthy court battle that cost him the custody of his daughter. The final straw in court? Not the opposing lawyer reciting a litany of methods the star has used to kill opponents on screen to demonstrate the star makes a poor role model, no ... it is the daughter herself taking the stand and telling the judge that all of her friends laugh at her whenever her father appears on television. Beaten down and depressed, his goal is simply to return home, to get out of the spotlight for a bit and recharge. But life isn’t that simple ... Van Damme has racked up a sizable legal bill and his lawyer is demanding immediate payment. But the well has run dry, the accounts are drained, and to pay the lawyer off Van Damme must first secure an advance payment from his next film and wire that money back to his lawyer. But things are never as simple as they could be and in this case a quick trip to the bank proves disastrous. The bank in question is in the middle of being held up and the police assume - wrongly - that Van Damme is the culprit when they arrive on scene. Before long it’s a full on media mob scene ...
From the very opening frame it is clear that JCVD is something special. First of all, director Mabrouk El Mechri has some serious, serious skill behind the camera. The cinematography is excellent, the script sharp, the editing rhythmic and Mechri is clearly in love with long, complicated single take shots with the camera seemingly floating through chaos. An example? The film begins with a film-within-the-film, on set of Van Damme’s latest (fictional) DTV effort with a single-shot action sequence that runs better than four minutes in a single take. This one shot summarizes a huge amount of what makes the film special: it first takes Van Damme’s existing persona and ramps up that existing vision of the star considerably - this is the best action sequence he’s been involved with for years and it’s hard not to see it as some sort of pointed response to the single take shots in Hard Boiled and Tom Yum Goong, and I seriously hope Gaumont kept all of the film-within-a-film stuff to actually make this film somewhere down the line - before gleefully poking a hole in it, the scene ending with a fake wall falling over when a door is slammed too hard and a winded Van Damme complaining to the director (who couldn’t possibly care less) that he’s forty-seven and it’s too damn hard to do these long takes at his age.
Things progress in a remarkably brave fashion from there, the film borrowing liberally from difficult aspects of the star’s own life. His drug abuse? It’s in there. The money problems? Really happened. The custody battle? Also real. That Van Damme would hand his life over to any director at all to use as fodder in a comedy, never mind to such a young and largely unproven director, is absolutely stunning. That Mechri handles the material so deftly is absolutely remarkable. The risk in doing these sorts of Kauffman-esque sorts of films is that unless you are an absolute raging genius who is also gifted with a good sense of human nature, a brilliant sense of humour and a star with some serious performance chops you are doomed to create little more than a self-absorbed piece of junk. Mechri, it is safe to say, is an absolute raging genius with a good sense of human nature and a brilliant sense of humour. Plus one hell of a good star.
And here comes the part where I say something I never thought I would say. I like Van Damme movies and I’ve seen a lot of them. Up to a certain point - I believe it was Hard Target - I saw every one of them in the theatre in its first week of release. But I would never have dreamed of saying that Van Damme was a good actor. Until now. Jean Claude Van Damme, when given the right material and a director who knows how to work with him, is one hell of a good actor. His face has taken on a good amount of character as he has aged, he makes himself remarkably vulnerable in this which works wonders, he proves to have natural timing and a gift for comedy and he should have started working in his native language years ago. He’s got the goods, he’s just never really been given much of a chance to show it before.
Funny without relying on punchlines, clever, insightful, neatly balancing action with drama, impeccably crafted and blessed with a charismatic star willing to simply lay it all out there and let things fall where they may, JCVD is a revelation. If there’s any justice in the world at all this film will both launch its director to major acclaim while also triggering a full-on rebirth for its star, one that should take him worlds away from the DTV action ghetto that he’s been consigned to for years.
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Reader Comments
Oldboy 05/27/2008 @ 12:42pm
wow! great review! i gotta see this.
quartet4 05/27/2008 @ 12:44pm
This is a must-see for me. Even more so after Todd’s glowing review. Never thought I’d say that for a Van Damme movie again.
LoBo 05/27/2008 @ 1:14pm
Van damme begun to act better in the film Replicant (2001). So, i would recommend people to watch Replicant, In Hell and Wake of Death. He also acts good in Until Death, but i don`t like that film so much.
I think only the first 45 min are good.
deacon_spires 05/27/2008 @ 1:17pm
Sounds great.. When will we see this here?
MikeOutWest 05/27/2008 @ 2:36pm
Great review Todd - glad to see Jean Claude step out of the DTV wilderness. I think Timecop was the last time I saw one of his movies in the cinema, which was a lot of fun. Can’t wait to see this.
Rhythm-X 05/27/2008 @ 7:46pm
Second that - when do we get to see this here?
Todd Brown 05/28/2008 @ 9:03am
Hope to have news on that soon. There are definitely a few companies sniffing around it.
crazybee 05/28/2008 @ 5:18pm
It would be an outrage if this didn’t get at least a limited theatrical release in the States (I’m hoping the French DVD is subtitled…bonus points for a subbed region free Bluray). I personally couldn’t be happier with your review, Todd. I’m really glad that Van Damme - who I’ve been a huge fan of for years - is finally getting this kind of recognition. He deserves it!
Todd Brown 05/29/2008 @ 7:17am
I think it’ll get a release. It’s all big companies sniffing around it, not the little DVD only labels, and it’s dead simple to market. They’d be missing a huge opportunity if they didn’t put it on screens.
callmesummit 06/02/2008 @ 6:41am
Cheers Todd!
Was the version you watched subtitled or any english used?
Todd Brown 06/02/2008 @ 2:39pm
There’s a small amount of English but it’s dominantly French with subtitles.
Lurple 09/05/2008 @ 10:12am
It’s too bad that they’re only screening this twice at TIFF. I was really hoping to see it but I won’t be at the festival until later on. Ah well, I’ll catch it later on.
emacs 09/05/2008 @ 11:44am
i was at the JCVD screening and i came away rather impressed. i had no idea Van Damme can actually act and emote. the rebirth of a celebrity is possible and given the right set of circumstances we may be seeing much more of Jean Claude in the years to come.
Rhythm-X 09/05/2008 @ 1:24pm
Is Peace Arch actually going to able to get this released in more than 2 cities, or are they going to partner up with a company I’ve actually heard of?
M@rc 09/06/2008 @ 4:29am
All I need to know is: when is the DVD coming?
ubik 10/13/2008 @ 6:07am
funny thing: the trailer cites this review: “JVCD is a revelation - twitch.com”, which belongs to the musician Peter Kay.