La Chimera -
Perhaps the Chimera is not a monster to be slain, but a part of us—the part that insists there is something else beneath the surface. Whether you come to La Chimera for Josh O’Connor’s raw performance, the breathtaking cinematography, or the haunting score by Apparat, you will leave with dirt under your fingernails and a tear in your eye.
Arthur is the spiritual center of this chaos. Dressed in a wrinkled linen suit with a perpetually downcast gaze, he is a hero of the absurd. O’Connor, known for The Crown and Challengers , delivers a career-best performance as a man crushed by grief. He is a parody of the classic British adventurer—think Indiana Jones without the whip, without the hope, and without the hat. When Arthur uses his dowsing rod, the film shifts into magical realism: the earth groans, the trees part, and the dead whisper. He is a shaman for a world that has lost its religion. Co-written and directed by Rohrwacher (the mind behind Happy as Lazzaro ), La Chimera is a visual poem. Cinematographer Hélène Louvart shoots on grainy 16mm film, giving the picture a texture of memory. The colors are washed out—the Italian sun feels harsh and pale—creating a world that is already half-in-the-grave. La Chimera
Since its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and subsequent theatrical release, La Chimera has captivated audiences with its grainy 16mm aesthetic and its enigmatic protagonist, Arthur (played with soulful exhaustion by Josh O’Connor). But to understand the film, one must first understand the two meanings of its title: the mythological beast and the archaeological reality. For the uninitiated, the word "Chimera" carries a dual weight. In Greek mythology, the Chimera was a monstrous fire-breathing hybrid—part lion, part goat, part serpent—that was ultimately slain by the hero Bellerophon. To chase a "chimera" means to pursue an impossible dream, a fantasy that cannot be caught. Perhaps the Chimera is not a monster to
We live in a time obsessed with nostalgia. We chase the chimeras of "the good old days," decade-themed parties, and reboots of our childhood cartoons. Arthur is a mirror for the modern anxiety: the feeling that the best thing has already happened, that we are just grave robbers picking through the remains of a more meaningful past. Dressed in a wrinkled linen suit with a