Get us in your inbox

The Wild Child

  • Film
684.x600.film.wildchild.jpg
Advertising

Time Out says

The story, based on fact, of a late 18th century behavioural scientist's attempts to condition a wild boy found in the woods in the ways of 'civilisation'. The confrontation of Rousseau's noble savage with Western scientific rationalism makes for a film with enormous philosophical implications: emotional subjectivity versus scientific objectivity, nature versus nurture, society versus the individual. Given the semi-documentary treatment and the subject itself, the film could have been excruciatingly dull in lesser hands. In fact it's as lucid and wryly witty a film as you could wish for, uncluttered by superfluous period detail. A beautiful use of simple techniques - black-and-white photography, Vivaldi music, even devices as outmoded as the iris - give it a very refreshing quality. The use of much voice-over from Dr Itard's original journals, set against images patently contradicting the scientist's detached assumptions, make for some pretty ironies, and fundamentally question the morality of much scientific investigation, as well as attempting to evaluate the worth of many of our social constructs (such as education). A deeply moving film, dedicated to Jean-Pierre Léaud, the actor who plays Truffaut's semi-autobiographical hero, Antoine Doinel.
Written by RM

Cast and crew

  • Director:François Truffaut
  • Screenwriter:François Truffaut, Jean Gruault
  • Cast:
    • Jean-Pierre Cargol
    • François Truffaut
    • Jean Dasté
    • Françoise Seigner
    • Paul Villé
    • Claude Miller
Advertising
You may also like
You may also like