Film Review
Winner of the coveted Prix Louis Delluc in 1999, this uniquely whimsical comedy from Otar
Iosseliani offers an original slant on a familiar theme, the inability of human beings
to escape from the social milieu they are born into. Whilst one young man,
tired of wealth and privilege,
yearns for simpler, more earthy existence, another, from a modest background, squanders
his meagre savings to show the world he is a man of means. Around them, other men
and women are engaged in a similarly futile endeavour.
It is hardly the most original or sophisticated of plots, but Otar Iosseliani, with his
inimitable eye for detail and penchant for wry observational comedy, makes of it something
that is strikingly humanist and rather charming. With a cinematic style that is
simultaneously reminiscent of that of
Jacques Tati
and
Luis Buñuel, with a touch
of
René Clair for good measure, Iosseliani skilfully captures the nuances of daily
life and lends them an air of surreal farce. His portrayal of the bourgeoisie is
particularly cruel, contrasting their preening self-importance with that of a pet stork.
The film's title is a reference to what sailors used to say, with some contempt, when
leaving dry land. How perverse Nature is to give those who are born on land an eternal
longing to go to sea... During his self-imposed exile in France, the Georgian filmmaker
crafted several quirkily idiosyncratic films of this kind, including the
utterly charmimg
La Chasse aux papillons (1992).
© James Travers 2004
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Next Otar Iosseliani film:
Jardins en automne (2006)
Film Synopsis
One day, Nicholas, a rich young man, decides to give up his privileged life and see for
himself how ordinary folk live. He gets a job washing up dishes in a Parisian café,
befriends a beggar and tries to court a barmaid, without success. The latter has
fallen for the charms of another young man who spends the little money he has on nice
clothes and his smart motorcycle, to give the impression he is wealthy. For both
men, the grass turns out to be much less green than they had imagined...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.