Joan Chemla’s If You Saw His Heart begins with a rather sprawling, complex opening act, deliberately disorientating, as the viewer is tasked with piecing this narrative together. Yet as we progress towards the latter stages it becomes increasingly obvious that there’s not really anything to piece together, as a film that promises so much and yet delivers so little.
Gael Garcia Bernal stars as Daniel; a petty crook making ends meet in a society of travellers that live in the shadows of the bustling city of Marseille. Alongside his dear friend Costel (Nahuel Perez Biscayart), who Daniel has lured into this life of crime which ultimately led to the latter’s untimely death, he’s now on the run, with Costel’s hot-headed, older brother on his tail. Daniel winds up at a derelict hotel, which is where he meets a beautiful stranger Francine (Marine Vacth), and while she appears to be just as lost in this brutal underworld as he is, this elusive stranger may just prove to be the very person able to claw him back out of it.

Thankfully, however, Bernal shines in the leading role, as an actor complete with such an intangible, yet absorbing screen presence. He’s complimented by a stranger at Costel’s wedding at the start on his eyes – only for the groom to respond with, ‘if you saw his heart’ – a predicable, contrived means of enforcing the title into the dialogue, and yet it rings somewhat true, for where this actor is concerned, when he performs, both his eyes and his heart are equally as beguiling, as he prevents this flawed production from falling into obscurity, just about keeping it ahead above water, and the viewer just about invested. Just.