Film Review
Blind faith is the main target of the sharp wit of one of France's most
successful screenwriting duos, Agnès Jaoui and Jean-Pierre
Bacri, in their latest middle-brow comedy,
Au bout de conte. The end of
the couple's long-term romantic relationship in 2012 appears not to
have impaired their ability to work together, although their latest
cinematic offering does have a slightly more cynical, tongue-in-cheek
edge to it than much of their previous work. A modern fairytale
which gleefully plunders the child-oriented fantasies of Charles
Perrault and the Brothers Grimm,
Au
bout du conte has great fun mocking those who choose to live in
a rose-tinted universe, although it also puts up a pretty strong case
in the defence of illusions. Self-delusion is, after all,
something to which we are all prone, and you could argue that without
it life would be unbearable.
For her fourth feisty outing as a film director (and eighth
screenwriting collaboration with Bacri) Agnès Jaoui assembles a
first rate cast, headed by the supremely talented newcomer Agathe
Bonitzer, a fairytale princess if ever there was one. Another
rising star, Arthur Dupont, is suitably cast as in the Prince Charming
role, whose professional and romantic ambitions are threatened by
a deliciously wicked Benjamin Biolay (boo, hiss). With just a
little irony, Jaoui casts herself as the neurotic fairy godmother and Bacri as a
grumpy ogre obsessed with his mortality, and these two (as you might expect) get the
lion's share of the laughs. The fumbling lowkey Jaoui-Bacri
romance (which is carried by a series of increasingly funny driving
lesson sketches) has more than a faint echo of Jaoui's celebrated
first feature
Le Goût des autres
(2000), although the film overall lacks the sparkle and ingenuity of
this earlier film.
Jaoui admits that, in making
Au bout
de conte, she had in mind the form of the musical comedy and was
inspired by Stephen Sondheim's
Into
the Woods, from which she takes the idea of several
crisscrossing fairytales. Cinematic references range from Jacques
Demy's
Peau d'âne to Cocteau's
La Belle et la bête,
although Jaoui does an effective respray job on her literary and filmic
sources and you would never think she was trying to palm off second
hand (stolen) goods onto an unsuspecting audience. Whilst the
film is a tad over-long and struggles to make a satisfying coherent
whole, it is admirably redeemed by its abundance of waspish one-liners
and laugh-out-loud comic situtations.
Au bout du conte is not Jaoui and
Bacri's best work by any means, but it is an enjoyable romp which is
all the better for its haphazard forays into deeper territory, which it
does with the pleasing insouchiance of a newborn goat skipping playfully across
a well-stocked minefield, albeit without the same predictably messy
outcome.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Agnès Jaoui film:
Le Goût des autres (2000)
Film Synopsis
20-something Laura has fallen in love with Sandro, an aspiring young
musician, but their affair is threatened by Laura's overly attentive
father Guillaume and the womanising impresario Maxime. Meanwhile,
Laura's aunt Marianne, a struggling actress, and Arthur's emotionally
repressed father Pierre are coping with their own mid-life
traumas. An unlikely romance develops when Pierre offers to give
Laura driving lessons...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.