Film Review
Comédie de l'innocence is a comparatively banal film from Chilian born director
Raoul Ruiz, a man who has already demonstrated an unusual artistic flair and unique cinematographic
style in such films as
Le
Temps retrouvé (1999) and
Généalogies
d'un crime (1997).
Comédie de l'innocence is essentially just
a simple tale about childhood make-believe, viewed from the perspective of a mother who
is incapable of seeing through her son's fabrication and ends up nearly losing her mind.
The scenario is simple but it has great potential. With the talent that Ruiz had
at his disposal (including the magnificent trio of Isabelle Huppert, Charles Berling and
Jeanne Balibar) this could and should have been an excellent piece of French cinema.
Unfortunately, the film falls way off the mark and is largely a disappointment.
Ruiz's preoccupation with symbolism and double meanings, the heavily laboured cinematography,
and the lack of realistic dramatic developments, give the film an irritatingly artificial
and insubstantial feel. Huppert and Balibar are on fine form and it is perhaps their
contribution which makes the film watchable at all. Unfortunately, the quality of
their input is marred by comparatively weak performances in their co-stars (particularly
the stilted child actors) and a generally mediocre script which lacks credibility and
depth.
Perhaps what is most disappointing is the way in which the mood of supernatural mystery
which pervades in the first two-thirds of the film is rationally and suddenly resolved
in the last third. Until that point, the film is quite compelling; afterwards, it
quickly becomes tedious whilst its artificiality and lack of depth is cruelly exposed.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Raoul Ruiz film:
Les Âmes fortes (2001)
Film Synopsis
On his ninth birthday, Camille casually tells his mother, Arianne, that she is not his
real mother and that he desperately wants to go home, to his real home. Initially
amused by her son's whimsy, Arianne allows her son to take her to his “true home”, only
to find that the owner, a young violinist named Isabella, is away from home. Soon
after, Arianne receives a fax from Isabella inviting her to meet her. When they
finally get to meet, Camille instantly recognises Isabella as his real mother. Isabella
tells Arianne that two years ago she lost her own son, Paul, in a tragic accident, and
she is certain that Camille is her own child. Perplexed but worried that she might
lose Camille to a stranger, Arianne invites Isabella to stay with them in her home.
She soon regrets it...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.