Film Review
For a director for whom the busy urban landscape and rapid pace of modern
living are so much a part of the fabric of his films, it feels like a radical
departure that, for his latest feature, Cédric Klapisch should turn
his back on the big city and instead set up camera in the tranquil depths
of the French countryside.
Ce qui nous lie sees Klapisch imbibing
to the full the natural splendour of French wine growing country - Burgundy
to be precise - but instead of serving up something new he appears content
merely to replay old songs that have somehow lost their appeal. Far
from being a
grand cru, the director's latest populist indulgence
is more a tepid table wine, one that is perhaps a little too sweetly saccharine
for most tastes.
Klapisch is of course best known for his amiable student-centric comedy
L'Auberge espagnole (2002)
and its two sequels -
Les Poupées
russes (2005) and
Casse-tête
chinois (2014). These snazzy, admittedly vacuous, feel-good
comedies have brought the director fame and mainstream success but much of
his other work has fallen by the wayside, a reflection perhaps of his inability
- or unwillingness - to broaden out and embrace other themes and styles.
His latest film is yet more proof of this, a somewhat lazy attempt to transpose
the likeable trappings of
L'Auberge espagnole to a vineyard-based
family drama, of the kind that has already been tackled, more successfully
by other French filmmakers - Gilles Legrandin in
Tu seras mon fils (2011) and
Jérôme Le Maire in
Premiers
crus (2015).
Despite some input on the scriptwriting front from an experienced wine grower
(Jean-Marc Roulot),
Ce qui nous lie presents a somewhat superficial
and woolly handling of the issues facing today's small vineyard owners in
the face of commercial pressures. Gilles Legrandin treats the subject
far more convincingly in his film; Klapisch deals merely in bald clichés
and borrowed ideas. The attractive photography of the stunning Burgundy
landscape is the film's main asset, but even this cannot distract from the
recycled plot and the dull collection of two-dimensional archetypes that
have the arduous job of carrying a stillborn narrative and with whom the
film's authors expect us to engage.
It's pretty evident by now that Klapisch's forte is the full-throttle ensemble
piece with a large cast of distinct and colourful (albeit superficial) characters
zipping in and out of each other's intersecting storylines. With a
smaller principal cast and slower narrative pace, his failings as a writer
and director become all too evident, and it is in his latest film's more
intimate and serious moments that this becomes unbearable. Part of the
problem is the obvious lack of chemistry between the three leads - Pio Marmaï,
Ana Girardot and François Civil are all talented performers but none
seems particularly at home in this film. The real killer is the writers'
apparent inability to give their characters even the thinnest veneer of believability
and render them remotely interesting. If the protagonists in Klapisch's
previous films seem hollow and two-dimensional, here they are practically
transparent.
Soppy flashbacks (which rapidly becomes wearisome), an intrusive voiceover
and some attempts at forced emotionality are the laziest devices for instilling
some depth into the protagonists - three ill-matched siblings struggling
to connect and safeguard their family wine growing business - when
what is called for is convincing dialogue and authentic situations, rather
than a deluge of soap-style artifice dressed up in Klapischian stylistic
whimsy.
Ce qui nous makes a pleasant enough timewaster, best
appreciated with a few glasses of decent wine inside you, but what it fails
to deliver makes far more of an impression that what it somehow manages to
scrape together: a complacent rehash of second-hand ideas, served up with
no real engagement or panache.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Cédric Klapisch film:
Riens du tout (1992)
Film Synopsis
Juliette and Jérémie are two siblings who have chosen to stay
at home to help their father run his winegrowing business in the heart of
Burgundy. Their older brother Jean, now in his thirties, has settled
in Australia after travelling the world, to start a family of his own.
Juliette and Jérémie are taken by surprise when, unexpectedly,
Jean returns home, ostensibly over concerns that his father may be close
to death. Whilst Juliette is pleased to see her absent brother after
all these years, and intends doing all she can to persuade him to stay, Jérémie
is suspicious over Jean's motives and has some difficulty accepting the prodigal's
unwished-for re-appearance. When his father dies suddenly Jean makes
up his mind to stay, at least for the time being, to help his siblings with
the coming harvest. Heavily in debt, Jean has good reason for selling
his father's vineyard, but his brother is confident he can make a success
of the inherited business by going into partnership with neighbouring winegrowers.
Juliette has her own ideas...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.