Film Review
From the director of the widely acclaimed
Pour
Elle (2008), recently remade in America as
The Next Three Days by Paul Haggis,
comes another adrenalin-pumping action thriller, one of the best to
come out of France in years. It is a fast-moving, full-bodied
modern French
polar that
grabs your attention almost from the first frame, drags you at
breakneck speed through a bleak post-noir landscape and doesn't let go
until the end credits crash in and send you back to reality with a
jolt. Director Fred Cavayé brings not only a frenetic
energy and visceral realism to
À
bout portant but also a stark humanity - his characters are not
the predictable thriller stereotypes, but well-drawn, complex human
beings coping with the crises that come their way. Although
the plot is even more credibility-stretching than Cavayé's
previous film, somehow this one feels more real, partly because it is
better structured and far less prone to pointless navel-gazing
introspection, but mainly because the main protagonists are more
convincingly developed and played with much greater conviction.
The easiest criticism to make of
À
bout portant is that its plot is virtually identical to that of
Pour elle. Both films are
centred on an ordinary man who allows himself to be propelled into an
extraordinary adventure in order to save the person dearest to
him. Fred Cavayé is clearly an old-fashioned romantic at
heart, but there is something irresistible about the notion that love
(rather than gamma radiation or a teaspoon of Kryptonite) can transform
a mild-mannered nobody into an athletic action hero. On this
occasion, Monsieur Tout-le-monde is a humdrum nurse played by the
charismatic Gilles Lellouche, in his most arresting and substantial
performance to date. Interestingly, this part was
originally intended for Lellouche's better-known co-star Roschdy
Zem. Once he had seen the script, Zem was adamant that he would
play the rougher character, Hugo Sartet (cheekily named after a
gangster played by Alain Delon in
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969)),
and he does so with a surprising brutality and vigour.
Much of the film revolves around the uncomfortable relationship between
Lellouche and Zem's diametrically opposed characters, the sympathetic
good guy and the hardened criminal. It is a classic set-up - two
ill-matched individuals forced into an alliance through mutual
self-interest, with both undergoing a profound transformation under the
other's influence. More than anything, this is what makes the
film so compelling and Lellouche and Zem's true-to-life performances
elevate it way above the level of a standard action thriller.
To his credit, screenwriter Guillaume Lemans does not
weigh the film down with needless exposition but instead leaves much
unsaid. Not only does this help the film maintain its unremitting
pace, but it heightens the suspense and gives it a chilling Kafka-esque
mystique. Like the characters we see on the screen, we cannot
help feeling we have been caught up in a complex game of intrigue,
whose rules have yet to be elucidated and whose outcome is far from
certain.
Galvanised by its magnetic central performances,
À bout portant particularly
excels in its mise-en-scène and editing, arguably the two areas
that can so easily make or break a thriller. The action scenes
are exceptionally well-shot and well-cut, especially the frantic chase
through the Paris Métro, which stands up well alongside
similar sequences in Jean-Pierre Melville's
Le
Samouraï (1967) and Jean-Jacques Beineix's
Diva
(1981). As the film builds to its nerve-wracking climax, the
tension becomes almost unbearable, and whilst the resolution is perhaps
a little too hurried and a tad complacent, it provides a reasonably
satisfying conclusion to a relentless and pretty gruelling barrage of
thrills and spills.
À
bout portant does perhaps adhere a little too slavishly to a
familiar formula, but this is more than made up for by the sheer
quality of the direction, editing and acting. How many months
will it be before its American remake gets the green light? It's
reassuring to know that Hollywood can still learn a thing or two from
the French...
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Everything was going so well for Samuel. He was about to qualify
as a nurse and his wife Nadia was expecting their first child.
But then it all went wrong, just because Samuel happened to be in the
wrong place at the wrong time. When Nadia is kidnapped under his
impotent gaze, Samuel knows that his life will never be the same
again. Having regained consciousness, he receives a sinister
ultimatum from the people who have abducted his wife. If he wants
to see Nadia again in one piece, he must deliver to her kidnappers one
of his patients, a shady looking man named Hugo Sartet.
Realising what they are up against, Samuel and Sartet agree to pool
their resources. Alas, time is not on their side...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.