Film Review
Mirth on the Orient Express? It may not be the most original or intelligent
of French comedies in recent years, but it's hard to deny that
Barnie
et ses petites contrariétés is a very funny film, an exuberant bedroom
farce which just about manages to avoid tipping over into crass silliness. It's
a first full length film for Bruno Chiche, although he has made a number of short films
over the past decade. Chiche's inexperience is apparent not just in the quality
of the acting - which is wildly over-the-top in places - but also in the film's uneven
pace and tone. Despite its obvious faults, this is a film that is genuinely entertaining
and, in a few places, laugh-out-loud funny. Whilst it's a shame to see so many big
name actors failing to live up to their reputation (Marie Gillain and Serge Hazanavicius
are pretty well wasted in this film), it's a treat to see Fabrice Luchini playing straight
Mr Bean-style farce instead of the intellectual kind of comedy for which he is better
known. It's not clever, it's not particularly memorable, but it is a wonderfully
diverting piece of fun.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Bruno Chiche film:
Hell (2006)
Film Synopsis
Barnard Barnich, known to all as Barnie, is a successful 40-something businessman
who works in London but lives in Calais with his devoted wife Lucy.
Even though he is happily married, Barnie also has a mistress, Margot, and
a gay lover, Mark, so juggling the demands of work and his increasingly complicated
love life is a full-time preoccupation. Barnie has so far managed to
keep his wife from finding out about his extra-marital escapades, but his
cheating finally catches up with him on his birthday when he receives the
same gift from each of his three partners - a ticket for a romantic holiday
in Venice on the Orient Express.
Knowing that he can accept only one of the three tickets, Barnie decides
to keep the one his wife sent him and return the others, with apologies,
to his two lovers. This way at least he can preserve his marriage and
avoid an acrimonious and costly divorce. Unfortunately, in his haste,
Barnie mixes up his replies to Mark and Margot, so they each get the other's
letter by mistake. Naturally, these two are infuriated to learn that
they both have a rival, so infuriated in fact that their only thought is
to head over to Barnie's home in France and give him a piece of their mind.
As luck would have it, they arrive at just the moment when Barnie learns
that his wife has been carrying on an affair of her own. It seems that
whilst he was away in London, amusing himself with Mark and Margot, Lucy
has been getting on very intimate terms with one of her daughter's schoolteachers...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.