The fragile balance of the characters: 5 questions to Richard Blaimert, author of Cerebrum

The fragile balance of characters: 5 questions to Richard Blaimert, author of Cerebrum

BET À DAY

Richard Blaimert has always been interested in the human soul. In Le monde de Charlotte, a young girl confides in her shrink her thoughts on her surroundings. Already the balance of his characters was a concern. He was avant-garde by proposing Cover girl, a series on drags, or New address which addressed with great accuracy medical assistance in dying which did not make headlines. We owe him the comedies The ups and downs of Sophie Paquin and Penthouse 5-0 where exuberance hid often an emotional void. And he also discussed romance and its doubts with Hubert and Fanny. We hailed the audacity of Cerebrumwhich finely deals with mental health against a thriller background. An experience that he renewed for a second season, the birth of which was sensitive to the image of the care he gives to his characters. 

Cerebrum

Henri Lacombe was first interpreted by Claude Legault. In season 2, François Papineau took over. Does a change of actor influence the musicality of the dialogues that the author lays? 

Before, I was more stuck on who was going to play my characters. As I get older and with experience, actors come to me later in the process. Claude had come quickly into my mind. Losing him was extremely difficult. We waited for it. It was a big shoe to replace. We wondered who could confront the character. Francois is amazing. He is taller, a little more awkward in his body, when Diane (Sonia Vachon) wants to hug him, for example, but when I watched the editing, there were times when the two actors looked alike. The character has established itself. So I didn't change anything.

In the first season, the plot was directly aimed at Doctor Lacombe. The plot of season 2 is about one of his patients. Was it taken for granted that some of the patients would come back with an even stronger plot? 

Jules (Alexis Martin) won out. It allowed us to see how far we can go to turn a life upside down. It was important that I had fun writing it and that nothing was free. If you bring back characters, there absolutely must be additional actions. 

We know that suspense is a very popular genre. Is having characters with mental health issues fertile ground for this? 

What is complex with mental health is that it is not sexy. Dramatically, if I only had that, it would be heavy. In psychiatry, the cases are serious and recovery is long. There is an evolution, but also relapses. Audiences like more impactful cases. When we do police, we have to keep the show breathless. This season, Dr. Lacombe consults and even the mental health of Simone (Christine Beaulieu – the investigator) is affected. 

It was bold to deal with mental health when the first season was aired. Is it important to stay as current with the cases? 

Cerebrumis a demanding series to write. It is both a police series and a hospital series. I have four consultants who proofread my texts. We talk more about mental health than before. I dealt with schizophrenia in a gentler way in season 1. To do it again, I would put the character in crisis because today we talk about it more. I always have to wonder about what we haven't seen. Two years in advance. A young man who looks like a monster, crimes on social networks, a fronto-temporal case. This is the psychiatrist Marie-Eve Cotton who came to me with this. It takes a good dose. You have to have the delicacy to choose the subjects, but also to know where to stop. It's not my role to show everything. I have to manage a degree of discomfort that is both realistic and respectful.

Henri and Simone have an ambiguous relationship. Do you find pleasure in creating a little confusion in us even though we know that a relationship is impossible? 

I know what the characters are thinking. As for me, the attraction is stronger on Henri's side than on Simone's. Henri is sensitive to her great beauty until Christian (Éric Robidoux) tells him that she is a lesbian. There is still something that touches Simone in Henri. He has a paternal side, touching, comforting, reassuring. They are two very lonely souls. And since I spend all my days in front of the computer, it's fun to develop scenes where there is a little slippage. It brings a little lightness. 

Cerebrum Tuesdays at 9 p.m. on ICI Télé< /strong>