Film Review
After the immense success of
Camping (2006) it was only a
matter of time before director Fabien Onteniente served up a second
helping of summer holiday themed humour, assembling most of the cast of
the first film and recycling nearly all of its gags. If
Camping were a Burger King-style
banquet,
Camping 2 would have
to be its reheated leftovers, a tasty enough repast but ever so
slightly stale and predictable (albeit without the diarrhetic
consequences). Gérard Lanvin, the star of
the first film, was unwilling to make a return visit to Flots Bleus, so
Richard Anconina steps into the breach, forming the unlikeliest buddy
act in film history with Franck Dubosc, Alan Delon's camp alter ego from a
parallel universe.
For some incomprehensible reason, the only thing that the French like more than
going on holiday is to watch films about people going on holiday, so
Camping 2, like its predecessor,
was a massive box office hit. (
Camping
attracted five million spectators; its sequel had to make do with four
million). The success of both films is hard to fathom - most of
the jokes and comic situations appear to have been concocted by a class
of unimaginative primary school children, and some look suspiciously as if they may
have been stolen from a box of Christmas crackers. ("Christophe
Colomb a découvert l'Amérique, et moi j'ai des couverts
en plastique..." - yep, that's the level of humour to expect.)
What narrative thread there is in
Camping 2 is pretty well in the advanced and possibly
terminal stages of anorexia, so what
the film essentially boils down to is a series of grimly anodyne
sketches. The end result feels horribly like a compilation of
mediocre holiday-themed movies.
Just about the only thing going for the film is its magnificent
ensemble cast. In addition to the aforementioned Anconina and
Dubosc, we are served up generous portions of Mathilde Seigner, Claude
Brasseur, Mylène Demongeot and Antoine Duléry - all
making the most of the stale comedy titbits that Onteniente throws at
their feet, lapping them up like starving wolves.
Camping 2 is by no means a
masterpiece, but it is an enjoyable diversion if you have nothing
better to do with your time and you take a sadistic pleasure in
watching other people's holiday plans go horribly awry, which, let's
face it, is just about all of us....
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Fabien Onteniente film:
Camping 3 (2016)
Film Synopsis
Jean-Pierre Savelli is in the midst of a mid-life crisis. A
forty-something insurance broker from Clermont-Ferrand, he is stunned
when his wife Valérie tells him she wants to put their
relationship on hold for a while. Jean-Pierre has no choice but
to change his holiday plans, and so he checks into Flots Bleus, a
popular camp site near Arcachon, accompanied by his young
daughter. Jean-Pierre's hopes of passing a peaceful few days by
the sea are ruined when the camp gigolo, Patrick Chirac, appears and
tells him he is to be his buddy this year. With Patrick's
unwelcome help, Jean-Pierre will become a new man, whilst Patrick
undergoes a transformation of his own...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.