Showing posts with label Fabrice Luchini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fabrice Luchini. Show all posts
REVIEW: DVD Release: Paris
Film: Paris
Release date: 2nd February 2009
Certificate: 15
Running time: 125 mins
Director: Cedric Klapisch
Starring: Juliette Binoche, Romain Duris, Fabrice Luchini, Albert Dupontel, Mélanie Laurent
Genre: Comedy/Drama/Romance
Studio: Optimum
Format: DVD
Country: France
César Award Nominee Cédric Klapisch pays homage to his home city in this 2008 ensemble feature, focusing on a diverse group of characters living in Paris. Klapisch intermittently observes and intertwines the lives of various inhabitants of the City of Love, and whilst illustrating an ever-unfulfilled society, ponders the motivations behind humanity’s desire to survive.
The film opens with and centres on Pierre (Romain Duris), a cabaret dancer who is told by his cardiologist that he will require a heart transplant if he is to have even a chance of surviving. Pierre’s heart condition leads him to reflect upon his life, his passions, and those transient moments which are so effortlessly taken for granted.
Refined to his apartment, Pierre observes the lives of the people wandering in the city below. It is this pastime which provokes Pierre to evaluate his own experiences, and to develop a true appreciation for those which made him feel the most happy and alive.
With his concerned sister, Élise (Juliette Binoche), caring for him, Pierre keeps himself occupied by watching those in the city below live their lives. When he is feeling up to it, Pierre takes walks outside, and crosses paths with those he has observed from above.
Inevitably, Pierre longs to dance, to run, and to make love to beautiful women as he once did. This regret and appetite for life leads him to encourage his sister to take more chances in life, rather than being so persistently pessimistic, like much of the Parisian society…
In a similar style to Paris Je t’aime, the film doesn’t purport that Paris is merely the city of romance, and proceed to spin its audience a clichéd yarn of happily ever after relationships. Instead, the film illustrates the different effects that love and sex can have on those involved, and analyses how different people approach the subject under different circumstances.
Klapisch is able to capture some of those rare moments which illustrate the frailty of human life, the beauty and the heart-ache of love, and the never sufficiently appreciated moments that pass us by too quickly. Nevertheless, Paris, much like the idealised city itself, and the often selfish and ignorant characters on display here, is beautiful but flawed.
There are some undeniably talented actors on display here, and the characters which they portray are worthy of far more screen time than can be afforded to them in one production. Indeed, some of the characters and sub-plots are so beguiling that Klapisch might have devoted a full script entirely to their cause.
Sadly, however, this is not the case, and Klapisch fails to develop upon any one character enough to leave viewers thoroughly satisfied, yet wanting more. Instead, the audience are left ever so slightly disappointed. Whether or not it is Klapisch’s intention to leave the audience, like many of his characters here, confused and unfulfilled, condensing the plots and saturating the number of characters would have been better avoided.
For instance, whilst being the focal point of the film, Pierre is not developed upon thoroughly enough for the audience to fully empathise with him and his changing perceptions towards life and people. It is evident that Pierre is a charismatic young man, and that he enjoyed his life as a cabaret dancer before his heart condition developed, but the fact that we see him so infrequently, and are given only a minor insight into his life, reduces the effect that his character should have on the audience.
This disassociation from Pierre is most evident in the closing scene, where Pierre appears almost resentful towards society for being so melancholic, and for not embracing life fully. The final words with which the audience are left are clearly intended to leave a lasting impression on the viewer, and yet the impact of this dialogue is diminished by our lack of understanding of Pierre, and how he lived his life prior to his illness. To Duris’ credit, he utilises his screen time well, and provides a convincing portrayal of a reflective young man, burdened with the fear of an imminent death. It is a shame, though, that his role is minimised by the inclusion of unnecessary excess characters.
Similarly, Elise (Binoche) serves as a further example of how Klapisch’s attempt to encompass such a broad scope of characters falls just short of the mark. Elise is a caring and selfless social worker, who despite her own problems at work and in her personal life, wants only to help her dying brother. Again, though, whilst the audience will certainly be grateful that Binoche’s natural beauty and captivating portrayal graces this production, they will undoubtedly be left with a sense of longing. The conclusion to Elise’s story, in particular, feels rushed and unconvincing, as if written merely as a convenient way to tie up some lose ends.
Roland Verneuil (Fabrice Luchini) is perhaps the most intriguing and complex character of all, and certainly the most bizarre. An expert in the history of Paris, teaching at the former University of Paris, Sorbonne, he becomes besotted by the young and beautiful Laetitia (Mélanie Laurent). This leads at first to panic attacks and a sudden change of job, quickly followed by an unlikely affair, which begins as a somewhat cringe-worthy and creepy stalking by Roland. This relationship sparks excitement in Roland, and causes him to act almost like a teenager, encountering his first love.
Again, though, this is a story that could be told all on its own, without the distracting interruptions of the other ongoing plots. Luchini, as with much of the cast, is a worthy addition to the production and certainly offers up many laughs and awkward moments, but it is his last dialogue that will impact most upon the audience.
It isn’t just the characters that suffer, however, as some of the peripheral subject matter of the film is too quickly brushed over. This lack of development of such topics ultimately means that they are put to the back of the viewer’s minds, and become almost pointless touching upon in the first place. For example, Khadija, a student of North African origin, takes a job working for a bigoted owner of a bakery, who nevertheless likes her for the simple reason that she works hard. This plot is barely developed at all, and would be better left for another project, rather than diverting away from the more prominent storylines.
Similarly, the story of Benoit (Kingsley Kum Abang), a resort worker in Cameroon, seems to have been thrown in only as an afterthought by Klapisch. Benoit is a somewhat misguided man who risks his life crossing the Straights of Gibraltar in an attempt to reach his brother, and a beautiful acquaintance, in Paris. Unfortunately, this rather serious and harrowing subject matter is turned into an almost redundant storyline, as it is thrown into the caldron of plots and picked out on too few occasions to have any real impact on the audience.
The splendid views of Paris and the inclusion of such tourist highlights as the Sacre Coeur, the Eiffel Tower and the Bastille are aesthetically beautiful, but occasionally make this feel like an advertisement for the city, pieced together by the Office du Tourisme. Like Woody Allen’s Manhattan, there’s a seeming intention to draw people to the city, as well as to provoke nostalgia, and remind those already living there why it is so romanticised. Klapisch, however, does not reach the same heights or achieve the same outcome as Allen did with Manhattan, nor which Klapisch himself has done in the past with films such as When the Cat’s Away or Russian Dolls.
Despite the film’s shortfalls, however, the audience will ultimately be rewarded for taking the time to view what is on offer. The film doesn’t apologise for sending out a clichéd message, and this is evident from the opening credits. Wax Taylor’s ‘Seize The Day’ is played to set the tone for the movie, and this carpe diem theme is wholly embraced and continued through to the film’s conclusion. The lyrics are echoed to the audience in the final scene and closing credits, leaving the audience with a familiar, but important message.
Paris is a film which offers nothing new in terms of its cardinal message to the audience, and certainly it suffers for its attempt to abbreviate the stories of too many fascinating characters into one sitting. Yet, there are some genuinely funny, bizarre and heartfelt moments to be shared here, and with the aid of some polished performances from a beautifully diverse cast, the audience could almost be forgiven for casting a shadow over the movie’s faults. TMO
REVIEW: DVD Release: Le Bossu

Film: Le Bossu
Release date: 4th October 2010
Certificate: 15
Running time: 124 mins
Director: Philippe de Broca
Starring: Daniel Auteuil, Fabrice Luchini, Vincent Perez, Marie Gillain, Yann Collette
Genre: Action/Adventure/Drama
Studio: Second Sight
Format: DVD
Country: France
An adaptation of Paul Feval’s 19th century historical novel, Phillippe de Broca directed the 1997 French film version of Le Bossu (The Hunchback). A lavish and handsome production, Le Bossu (released in some English speaking countries under the title On Guard) provides much in the way of buckle and swash; mixing real historical elements from its early 18th century setting in France with added drama and adventurous derring-do thrown in.
Forming a friendship with the famous French swordsman the Duke of Nevers (Vincent Perez), Lagardere (Daniel Auteuil) follows his friend and sword fighting mentor as the Duke travels to remote countryside to marry the mother of his infant daughter Aurore (Marie Gillain). However, Nevers’ dastardly cousin Gonzague (Fabrice Luchini) stands to lose his inheritance of the Duke’s fortunes with the discovery of Aurore’s birth, and ruthlessly orders the killing of the Duke and his entire wedding party.
Gonzague takes Nevers’ devastated would-be wife as his own, and lands the killing blade stroke to Nevers when he is not looking. Yet, unbeknownst to Gonzague (who assumes the pair drowned), Lagardere survives the onslaught of the henchmen and saves Aurore from harm. Before Gonzague gets away from the scene, Lagardere manages to brand his hand with a mark from his blade, so that he may recognise the perpetrator of his master’s downfall. As he lies near death, the Duke of Nevers requests vengeance by Lagardere on his behalf, no matter how long it may take him to achieve.
With sixteen passing years, Lagardere has brought up Aurore and passes on the legendary secret of the ‘Nevers Attack’ sword thrust. Concealed within a travelling troupe, Lagardere and Aurore live peacefully until the devious Gonzague discovers that they are still alive, and sends his scarred main henchman Peyrolles (Yann Collette) to hunt them down. Yet the wily Lagardere has a trick up his sleeve to finally gain vengeance for his friend the Duke, gaining Gonzague’s confidence in his guise as a hunchbacked financier, with the aim to reclaim the Duke’s estate in the name of the rightful heiress Aurore…
A major part of the success (in addition to some of the excess) of director Phillippe de Broca’s Le Bossu lies in the sumptuous period styling of the film, with a shine on the screen and bright colours of the Duke’s splendour shot by cinematographer Jean-Francois Robin (along with costume design by Christian Gasc) feeling wonderfully evocative of Enlightenment era France. This backdrop adds to the sense of peril and adventure in the film, as well as adding an almost mythical fairytale-esque glow to the events and swashbuckling proceedings.
Daniel Auteuil gives a stirring performance as the heroic Lagardere, who is following in the footsteps of Vincent Perez’s ridiculously charismatic Duke of Nevers. Le Bossu’s numerous sword fighting scenes, featuring multiple onscreen characters, are certainly extremely well choreographed, where the style of the legendary ‘Nevers Attack’ is a suitably heroic movement with gruesome visual consequences.
However, despite the Le Bossu’s extravagant stylings and highly enjoyable swordplay, de Broca’s film never feels quite sure of its dramatic intentions, and occasionally crosses into somewhat parodic territory. The performances of the lead actors (whilst played sincerely) come across in a fairly pantomimic fashion, undoubtedly accentuated by the over-the-top (yet no less impressive) period setting. While Auteuil’s performance is gleeful and entertaining, some smaller dramatic moments with Marie Gillain’s Aurore are also somewhat stilted.
Fabrice Luchini is highly engaging as the scheming baddie of the story in a way that is reminiscent of a French language version of Alan Rickman’s Sheriff of Nottingham in Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves. Yet, consequently, the over-the-top elements of the character feel rather pantomimic, and Luchini’s character Gonzague lacks real menace despite his foul deeds and extroverted villainy. For instance, Lagardere is able to infiltrate the inner workings of Gonzague’s operation by using his penchant for hunchbacked servants against him, successfully going under the guise of a hunchback financier. Gonzague’s main henchman Peyrolles (a wonderfully disconcerting Yann Collette) is also blatantly villainous in appearance, serving as the scarred and twisted muscle behind Gonzague’s plots to kill off his nemeses.
Despite these eccentricities, Le Bossu remains consistently enjoyable throughout its two-hour running time. The superb sword fighting set pieces and adventurous scope almost compensate for the film’s misgivings, and allow the viewer to be transported to a time of heroism and rumbustiousness in a significantly heightened crowd-pleasing way.
An entertaining swashbuckling romp, Philippe de Broca’s Le Bossu portrays a painterly view of 18th century France in lavish sets and locations. Daniel Auteuil is a charming rogue in his portrayal of Lagardere (although perhaps Gerard Depardieu was too busy filming Leonardo DiCaprio’s The Man In The Iron Mask to take the role at the time), where Fabrice Luchini and Yann Collette are suitably devious as the villains of the piece. An enjoyable, audacious and fun-filled adventure. DB
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