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Stranger by the Lake

by
ABR Arts 06 November 2013

Stranger by the Lake

by
ABR Arts 06 November 2013

Stranger by the Lake is set entirely within the perimeters of a cruising ground for men by the shores of a lake in France. There unfolds a perfectly simple temporal conceit in which the cruiser, a handsome thirty-something everyman called Franck (Pierre Deladonchamps), arrives each summer day, parks his car, and walks down to the pebbled beach by the lake’s edge. That this is a narrative of repetitions becomes clear the third or fourth time we see the sunny establishing shot of the makeshift carpark where Franck parks his Renault. His routine documents almost ethnographically what happens at the cruising ground: he walks down to the beach, greets some acquaintances, takes off his clothes, swims, sunbakes, waits, rummages around in the scrub for sex, then does it all again.

As a meditation on the enactment of desire, these recurring rituals do more than hint at desire’s banal repetitions. There is not, however, a single uncompelling moment in this film; writer–director Alain Guiraudie understands that the possibilities that reanimate desire are endlessly renewable, compelling such repetitions again and again. Arrive, park, walk, undress, swim, cruise, fuck, repeat.

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