Character, this year's Oscar winner for best foreign picture, is a Dutch epic about
a son's struggle with his tyrannical father. It's a good-looking, well-acted, and
well-constructed saga that, nevertheless, feels curiously remote and uninvolving.
Adapted from a popular 1938 novel of the same title by Ferdinand Bordewijk, the film
is assuredly written and directed by first-timer Mike van Diem. Set in 1920s Rotterdam,
Character is shaped like a thriller, albeit one with a Dickensian dramatic sprawl
and a nostalgically romantic touch. It tells the difficult life story of the aspiring
young lawyer Jacob Willem Katadreuffe (van Huet) and begins right at the story's
climax -- an apparent murder committed by the young man -- and then relates the story
of Katadreuffe's life in flashback as he tells his saga while under cross-examination
by the police for the crime. "You have worked against me all my life," shouts Katadreuffe
during that opening confrontation with the man whom we learn is his father. "Or for
you," the father counters. Katadreuffe is the illegitimate child of Dreverhaven (Decleir),
the city's most feared bailiff, a man who specializes in mercilessly evicting the
poor from their domiciles. It seems the one moment of tenderness Dreverhaven ever
had was his one-time dalliance with his housekeeper Joba Katadreuffe (Schuurman),
which resulted in the conception of his offspring Jacob. Joba moves from her employer's
quarters and wordlessly rebuffs his numerous proposals of marriage. She is no less
austere with her son, remaining coldly silent and inscrutable. Taunted as a bastard
by the other children and suffering from impoverishment, Jacob develops an uneasy
kinship with his aloof mother while what he sees in the streets constantly reminds
him of the harsh shadow cast by his father. When one day Joba rents out her son's
bedroom to a paying boarder, Jacob takes it as his sign to leave home. Thus he embarks
on the first of many economic self-help schemes that inevitably leave him in debt
to his father, whose financial tentacles within the community are myriad. But Jacob
uses his pluck, self-initiative, and mental agility to nevertheless advance in the
world; ultimately, he becomes a successful lawyer. But always he's a driven little
thing, humorless and cut off from the possibilities of love -- one of those walking
billboards for the failure of success. And it's the inextricable yet unacknowledged
knot between father and son that may be for both of them their curse and redemption.
Who really knows? So much of Character (like its ominous yet ill-defined title),
remains unspoken and unclear. Furthermore, the three essentially dislikable protagonists
at the heart of the story do little to suck in the viewer's sympathies. But who's
to say if such murky motivational parries are not the truest portrait of family life
today?
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Full Length Reviews
Character 
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