Film Review
The impact of unemployment on working class families and the importance of family ties
form the basis for this engaging social-realist piece from director Robert Guédiguian.
Once again, Guédiguian sets his story in his hometown of Marseille, the location
for numerous French films but none so strikingly realistic as those of this director.
The strength of Guédiguian's art lies in his ability to combine realist and
unreal elements (notably classical music) to tell a story of great humanity, poignancy
and social relevance.
À la vie, à la mort! is
unquestionably one of Guédiguian's most complete and evocative films, rich
in its portrayal of quiet human suffering yet wondrously poetic in its narrative style,
with some wry comedy offsetting the film's grimmer aspects. The film is as
much a piece of satire as a social-realist drama, yet it lacks both the vulgarity and
simplicity of most contemporary satire and the depressing miserabilist tendency of most social realism.
It isn't as uplifting as the director's subsequent
Marius et Jeannette (1997),
which deals with similar themes in a more upbeat manner, but it isn't quite
so bleak as his earlier
Ki lo sa? (1985)
and
Dieu vomit les tièdes (1989).
Poverty, emotional insecurity and death inevitably
appear in the film, but whilst showing us these unhappy aspects of life it also shows
us the positive side - friendship, the beauty of nature, the wonder of human imagination
and hope for a better future.
© James Travers 2004
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Next Robert Guédiguian film:
Marius et Jeannette (1997)
Film Synopsis
In Estaque, the working class district of north Marseilles, a family of Spanish immigrants
struggles to survive. Marie-Sol's job as a housekeeper provides both an income
and a modest home, but her husband Patrick has been unemployed for years. Her adopted
brother Jaco is also without work, and he ends up losing his family and his home when
he can no longer afford to pay the rent. When Marie-Sol loses her job, she, Patrick, Jaco
and her disabled father, Papa Carlossa, move in with her brother José, who runs
an increasingly run-down bar. José laments not being able to find work as
a mechanic, but contents himself with his ancient Mercedes and his partner Joséfa,
who, despite her age, manages to perform striptease acts for the bar's dwindling
clients. A young Arab boy, Farid, and a drug-addicted prostitute Vénus also
turn to José for support. Meanwhile, Marie-Sol continues to pray that she
may have a baby, in spite of the fact that she has no money to bring up a child…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.