Film Review
After Tonie Marshall's previous cinematic offering, the witty and incisive
Vénus beauté (institut),
Au plus près du paradis comes as something
of a major disappointment. An insubstantial romantic melodrama of the worse kind,
the film would be embarrassing if packaged as a cheap romantic novel of the kind you find
in supermarkets. Watching such talented actors as Catherine Deneuve and William
Hurt struggling to add meaning and substance to this incoherent nonsense is probably the
worst kind of cinematic torture you can experience. What was
Tonie Marshall thinking of?
The film gets off to a bad start by showing us a feeble contretemps between Deneuve and
Bernard Le Coq (another fine actor who is totally wasted here). The dialogue is
awful but most of it is drowned out by inappropriately dramatic music, evidently as a
parody of the movie clip we see in the following scene. Then, having had our attention
diverted to a far better film, a sequence from Leo McCarey's classic weepy
An
Affair to Remember, it is impossible to take any of what follows seriously.
It is like watching adorable lemming pups jump over a cliff - in slow motion.
"Oh no," you shout inwardly in numbed disbelief. "Not another death by cliché!"
Things do not improve when the location switches from France to New York. The
only change is that the same soppy dialogue is now translated into English (or rather
very prosaic American English). Deneuve and Hurt just about look right together
but the material they are given lacks the spark to make their on-screen relationship function.
Highways and hotel lobbies are strewn with more cuddly dead lemmings.
The only
thing that gives the film any artistic weight is Agnès Godard's cinematography.
Alas, this is completely wasted on a film such as this which only appears to want to emulate
the classic American romantic drama. Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery
but it can be offensive if you do it badly.
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Tonie Marshall film:
France Boutique (2003)
Film Synopsis
In late middle age, Fanette regrets not having settled down with the ideal partner of
her youth, Philippe. His shadow haunts her present and prevents her from having
a long-term relationship with other men. She sees herself like the heroine in the
film
An Affair to Remember - she too was
kept from her true soul mate, although things turned out all right in the end. On
a trip to America to take photographs for an art book she is working on, Fanette finds
herself paired up with Matt, a charming photographer of her own age. Whilst Philippe
remains in her mind, Fanette finds herself drawn to Matt and slowly comes to realise that
he is the man she has been waiting for…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.