Film Review
It has been over a decade since Arnaud Viard made his directorial debut
feature,
Clara et moi, a bittersweet
romance starring Julien Boisselier and Julie Gayet that proved to be a
moderate success in 2004. For the past ten years Viard has been
afflicted with what is known in the trade as 'second film impasse',
unable to come up with an idea that he can sell to a producer.
Whilst waiting for his inspiration to return, he has stuck to his day
job as a supporting actor, appearing in such lowbrow fare as the French
television series
Que du bonheur.
Viard's career as a film director looked to be dead in the water until
the fateful day when he had the oh-so-original idea (I don't think) of
pointing the camera at himself and making his struggle out of the usual
mid-career grove the subject of his second film. After all,
Fellini did it successfully with
8½ (1963), and there are
some who regard this hideously pretentious spectacle of grotesque
self-indulgence his best film, so why should Arnaud fail where one
great Italian maestro succeeded? Well, in the first place,
Arnaud Viard is not Federico Fellini and secondly Romain Goupil had
pretty much the same idea for his film
Les
Jours venus (2015), which ended up being released in France
just a few months before Viard's.
Arnaud fait son 2e film is
more 'Woody Allen on a shoestring' than 'Fellini in wild excess mode',
and that's no bad thing as one of the film's charms is its cheery
awareness of its low budget (in promoting the film, the director missed
no opportunity to tell the world that it cost only half a million euros
to make, a fair chunk of which came out of the pockets of an old school
chum). Viard naturally gets to play himself, an amiable
narcissist who is so well and truly stuck in the mid-forties rut that
he almost appears to derive some masochistic pleasure from it.
His love life is as hopelessly grounded as his filmmaking aspirations,
and he has the additional problem of a sick mother to deal with.
Luckily Rent-a-Cliché is doing good business at the moment
(especially in France), so all that Viard needs to fix his flagging
libido and inspiration is an unconvincingly cobbled together fling with
a much younger woman. Plotwise, there is very little that is new
in this film, and there are probably about a dozen other similar
offerings that cover exactly the same ground more competently.
But then, originality was never the defining characteristic of Viard's
cinema - his previous film was chock full of cinematic references and
still managed to delight critics and audiences.
Viard's second film brims with feel-good charm but it suffers from
being a tad too self-referential and struggles to be more than a
succession of sketches in which the director listlessly replays his
real-life experiences (it would be interesting to know where reality
ends and fiction takes over - unless Viard really is a babe magnet, we
can take it as read that some of his alter ego's livelier escapades are
more wish-fulfilment fantasy than lived experience). The curse of
the second film sticks limpet-like to its director as it has done to
many others before him (including Truffaut and Godard) but Viard gets
through it with most of his dignity intact. The fact that Viard
is playing himself gives this sophomore effort an endearing personal touch that makes up
for the patchy script. His reflections on life, viewed through
the pockmarked prism of mid-life uncertainty, are as light-heated as
they are authentic, and the film proves that you don't need a colossal
budget or even an average budget or even Jean Dujardin to make an
engaging and entertaining piece of cinema. Let's hope that
Le 3e film d'Arnaud will be quicker
in the coming (and more imaginatively titled than that) now that his
creative constipation seems to have been cured.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Arnaud is a frustrated filmmaker in his mid-forties who is in the midst
of a professional and domestic crisis. With one successful film
already under his belt, he is determined to make a second, but try as
he might, he can't come up with a subject to tempt his producer.
Like any good businessman, the latter will only hand over the readies
if he is guaranteed to get a decent return, and so far Arnaud's ideas
have ranged from the depressingly uninspiring to the downright
ridiculous. Arnaud's life at home is in a similar rut, and whilst
he wants nothing more than to have a child, his relationship with his
partner Chloé is so strained that this has even less chance of
happening than his making a second feature film. To make ends meet,
Arnaud is forced to resume his career as a teacher, and this is how he
comes to meet Gabrielle, the young woman who is about to change his
life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.