Film Review
It was in Mia Hansen-Løve's irresistibly poignant drama
Le Père de mes enfants
(2009) that Louis-Do de Lencquesaing came into his own as an actor and
was revealed to be a performer of rare charm and sensitivity.
With
Au galop (a.k.a.
In a Rush) Lencquesaing makes his
feature debut as a director, and the very same qualities that mark him
out as an actor of the first rank are to be found in his writing and
mise-en-scène. In narrative terms, however,
Au galop is an ungainly hodgepodge
of a film, bursting at the seams with familiar archetypes and well-worn
plot ideas. The allusions to the films of François
Truffaut are far from subtle and become wearying after a time
(particularly the unnecessary use of voiceover narration). Yet,
for all its flaws,
Au galop
is a film that is not without charm, and Lencquesaing's well-developed
faculty for expressing the pains of life with acuity and compassion is
as evident here as it is in his previous screen portrayals as an actor.
Au galop is fundamentally an
exercise in compare and contrast. Through the amorous exploits of
three women of different generations it presents the changing face of
romantic love as one gallops along life's highway. Lencquesaing
plays the main character, a writer with suicidal tendencies who falls
hopelessly in love with a woman (Valentina Cervi) who is already in a
settled relationship. Alice de Lencquesaing, the director's
daughter both on and off-screen, is the free-spirited teenager
negotiating her first romantic fling. At the other end of the age
spectrum, a magnificent Marthe Keller gives widowhood a bad name as she
goes off on her final quest for happiness. The film might easily
have been dubbed 'The Three Ages of Love', an enticing triptych of
desire that resounds with truth, wit and gentle irony.
The problem is that, in constructing his narrative and developing his
colourful cast of characters, Lencquesaing just doesn't know where to
stop. Xavier Beauvois is wasted in a secondary story strand
involving the main character's brother that doesn't go anywhere and
merely distracts from the main thrust of the film. The impact of
the death of a patriarch on his family could itself been the subject of
an entire film but here it is one ingredient among many, its poignancy
diluted by the superabundance of ideas that Lencquesaing feels he must
crowbar into his first film.
Au
galop feels like an Arnaud Desplechin film that has completely
run away with itself, or a rampaging plant has been too timidly
cultivated. Whilst it is hard to deny that there is a piercing
authenticity to this film, and that certain scenes within it are both
captivating and intensely moving, it is to be regretted that
Lencquesaing has yet to see the virtue of applying Occam's razor to his
art. But as directorial debuts go it's not a bad first bash.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
Married to a successful businessman, the mother of a daughter she adores,
Ada could not have made a better life for herself. But then she meets
Paul, a depressive writer who lives alone with his daughter. For Ada
and Paul it is love at first sight, but the romance has barely got under
way before Paul's father dies, creating a cruel distraction. Why is
nothing in life ever straightforward? Nothing but complications - and
time goes past so quickly...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.