French films

La Source des femmes (2011) - film review

  Radu Mihaileanu Comedy / Dramastars 3
La Source des femmes poster
Summary
The location is a small remote village, somewhere between North Africa and the Middle East.  Since the dawn of time, the women of this village have been forced to go and fetch water from a spring high in the mountains, under a blazing sun.  But now they have decided to take a stand.  Leila, a young bride, gathers the women of the village together and persuades them they should go on a love strike.  They will deny their husbands their conjugal rights unless they agree to fetch the water in their place...
Review
La Source des femmes photo
Having scored a palpable hit with his 2009 comedy Le Concert - a light-hearted look at the implications of Stalinism - Romanian-born director Radu Mihaileanu champions the cause of global feminism in his equally irreverent follow-up, La Source des femmes.  Inspired partly by Aristophanes’ war of the sexes comedy Lysistrata and partly by a real-life incident that took place in Turkey in 2001, the film follows the fortunes of a group of women in a remote (unspecified) village in the Middle East as they rebel against their men folk and demand a better way of life in exchange for marital privileges.  Coming in the wake of the Arab Spring (note the pun), the film has the advantage of being highly topical, but Mihaileanu’s tendency to over-egg the pudding and resort to well-worn clichés prevents him from saying anything particularly profound or original.

On the plus side, the film is beautifully filmed, making effective use of its stunning North African location, and features some highly talented actresses, notably Hafsia Herzi and Leïla Bekhti, who had previously distinguished themselves respectively in Abdel Kechiche’s La Graine et le mulet (2007) and Hervé Mimran and Géraldine Nakache’s Tout ce qui brille (2010).   Mihaileanu’s penchant for extracting humour from the unlikeliest situations is also very much in evidence, although here the comedy tends to work against the subject of the film and undermines the wider social messages that are struggling to make themselves felt. 

La Source des femmes is a film that is easy to engage with and a well-meaning attempt to arouse our concern for a subject of universal importance, namely the exploitation and subjugation of women by the male sex.  The problem is that it is a satire without teeth and it leaves you feeling that it has failed to say anything of any substance.  Whilst it is entertaining and does stir the conscience a little, the film is just to amiable and mealy mouthed for its own good.  Mihaileanu’s reluctance to arouse controversy is presumably what led him to set the film in the abstract, to tell an obviously contrived tale in an unnamed location rather than attach it to events in the real world (which is extraordinary given that it is based on a real incident).  As in each of his previous films, Mihaileanu looks as if he is out of his depth or simply lacks the courage of his convictions to tell a story with real bite.  Nonetheless, whatever shortcomings he may have as a serious auteur, Mihaileanu knows how to win an audience and once again he delivers a film that, whilst lacking in depth, is amply redeemed by its charm, humanity and cinematic grandeur.

© filmsdefrance.com 2012

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