
(French
with English subtitles)
directed by Jaco Van Dormael
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"First
there was nothing. Then there was music and then He made the
sun." Jaco van Dormael's The Eighth Day begins
by charting the creation of the earth seen through the eyes
of Georges (Pascal Duquenne), who has Down's Syndrome. "On
the third day He made records, and on the fourth, TV."
It is Georges' irrepressible imagination which lies at the
heart of van Dormael's original and inspired film.
A
chance encounter one night between Georges and overworked
businessman Harry (Daniel Auteil) sets the scene for a carefully-crafted
examination of love, loss and the rediscovery of life. Here
are two people who would never normally meet; a clash between
order and anarchy, blindness and perception. Harry has one
reality: his alarm clock, The Future Bank, the fact that his
wife has left him. Society has moulded him so thoroughly that
he has lost himself. Georges meanwhile has a whole universe
of realities and an infinite capacity for love.
Duquenne
and Auteil deservedly shared the Best Actor prize at Cannes
in 1996 for their emotive performances in The Eighth Day.
The film is at times almost overwhelmingly poignant, and it
is also brilliantly funny - after all, in a previous life
Jaco van Dormael was a clown with Belgium's 'Big Flying Circus'.
Charming and utterly moving, see The Eighth Day now,
before the Hollywood remake with Dustin Hoffman.