Populism and its Antidote
The second decade of the third millennium began well for French commercial
cinema, with two highly original upbeat comedies (
The Artist and
Intouchables) drawing large audiences
both at home and abroad. As the decade progressed, the mainstream took
a distinct turn for the worse, regurgitating tried and tested formulae whilst
scaling new heights of insipidity and asininity. The phenomenal success
of Philippe de Chauveron's
Qu'est-ce qu'on a
encore fait au Bon Dieu? and its even more depressing sequel appears
inexplicable, particularly as both films deal with France's most pressing
concern today - racial intolerance - in the most offensively crass and flippant
way imaginable. So, as the mainstream turns its back on the burning
issues of our age (radicalisation, immigration, social inequality, climate
change) and instead serves up innumerable sequels to such lowbrow fare as
Les Tuche,
Camping and
Taxi, it is left to the burgeoning
auteur sector to maintain French cinema's reputation for quality and intelligence.
In this at least, there are reasons to be cheerful, and with plenty of French
filmmakers of the calibre of Jérôme Bonnell, André Téchiné,
Rebecca Zlotowski, Christophe Honoré and Philippe Faucon to engage
our emotions and intellect we can expect France's auteur cinema to remain
a beacon of hope in our troubled times, whilst its complacent mainstream
counterpart follows our political leaders and sinks ever more
deeply into the treacherous mire of self-serving populism.
For a more complete list consult our
best films index and
complete films index.