Film Review
Gérald Hustache-Mathieu earned widespread critical acclaim for his two short
films
Peau de vache (2001)
and
La Chatte andalouse
(2002), but reaction to
Avril,
his first feature length film, has been mixed. The story of a
novice experiencing her sexual awakening is engaging but is likely to
cause offence to those of a traditional Christian mindset. The
film portrays religious devotion in a distinctly negative light, and
this perhaps weakens the power of the story it has to tell. Had
the central protagonist experienced a genuine conflict between the two
kind of lives she is offered, the film might have had greater
impact. Instead, Avril walks out of the dank austerity of convent
life into a sunshine idyll on the beach, and clearly she isn't going to
turn back.
The limitations of Gérald Hustache-Mathieu's skill as a director
and writer only really become apparent in the second half of the
film. In the first half, the director's inexperience works in his
favour, allowing him to bring a kind of understated
cinéma vérité
sincerity to many sequences, particularly those in which Avril
gradually falls under the spell of Pierre. It helps of course
that Hustache-Mathieu has such a talented cast of actors at his
disposal.
The charismatic Sophie Quinton provides a good focal point for the
film, totally convincing as the naive young woman who, like a butterfly
emerging from its chrysalis, slowly wakes up to her true
destiny. Equally impressive is Miou-Miou who brings a
solemn poignancy to her role, her character making a sad contrast with
Avril since there can be no magical transformation for her and perhaps
no redemption either. Although the principal male
characters are less well developed and slightly prone to cliché,
Nicolas Duvauchelle and Clément Sibony succeed in rendering them
sympathetic and believable. Of the principals, Duvauchelle shows most
promise - after making his mark in Claire Denis's
White Material (2010)
he would become a highly sought after actor in France,
featuring prominently in the television series
Braquo (2009-14)
and garnering favourable reviews for his performances in films such
as
Comme des frères (2012) and
Le Combat ordinaire (2015).
Where the film falls down is in its ending, which feels like the
cinematic equivalent of a train running off the rails and crashing into
a well-stocked farm of impossibly cute meerkats.
It all starts to go wrong when an innocent spot of DIY turns into a full-on paint
orgy similar to that served up (albeit somewhat more artfully) by Xavier Dolan
in
J'ai tué ma mère (2009).
After this surfeit of wild self-indulgence, the film goes totally bananas and concludes with
an ending that feels unbelievably contrived.
Overall, though,
Avril is a fairly respectable directing debut and Hustache-Mathieu would garner
more favourable critical attention with his next film, the
weird and wonderful
Poupoupidou (2011).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Avril has spent her entire life in a convent. Shortly after she
was born, she was given up to the mother superior,
Marie-Josèphe, who agreed to take charge of her
upbringing. Now, aged 21, Avril is about to take the vows that
will sanctify her life-long vocation as a nun. Before she does
so, her friend sister Bernadette tries to persuade her to reconsider,
to think about a life outside the convent. Avril is surprised
when Bernadette tells her that she has a twin brother. She takes
advantage of the period of reflection she is offered to try to find
him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.