Alterego

‘PREMIERE: Devil's Rope - Sophie Bruneau’

8 Mar.'15
- 00:00

In the presence of Sophie Bruneau

As in her previous film Trees, Sophie Bruneau needs only one object to describe a whole world. In Devil’s Rope barbed wire tells a parallel history of the settlement of America. What started out as a useful tool to fence in animals, leads to the staking of claims and the large-scale privatisation of land and ultimately to the sealing of the Mexican border against economic refugees. The former myth of the Wild West and the still popular phrase “God’s own Country” are taken ad absurdum in the face of the forest of private property signs and the gating frenzy. After all, individualisation and industrialisation come at a price. The land has long ceased to be a landscape and turned into mere arable territory. These facts are not devoid of a certain humour, which Bruneau brings out calmly in Devil's Rope. With gusto and some surprising twists she depicts the origins and versatility of this simple wire in grand tableaux. The references implied in the images to the original American movie genre, the Western, add to our enjoyment.

Practical information

Language

  • Subtitles: French

Co-production