Film Review
The actress Pascale Pouzadoux made a fair stab as a director with her
debut feature
Toutes les filles sont
folles (2003) but seems to have committed the artistic
equivalent of harakiri with this film's follow-up, a gloriously inept
adaptation of a novel by Alix Girod de L'Ain. Even if it had been
made in the 1990s,
De l'autre
côté du lit would have appeared dated and
clichéd; in 2009 it looks positively decrepit, like something
you'd expect to unearth in a Neolithic burial site.
Lumbered with
two of the most egregious stereotypes you can imagine as the main
protagonists, and with a ludicrously contrived plot that leaves no
addled-headed cliché unturned, the film might just have been
bearable had it been directed with a modicum of sophistication and a touch
of irony in the lead actors' performances. Alas, neither of the
latter is detectable and the film is about as tiresome and offensive as
its dismal premise will allow it to be. Even when the ink was
still dry on their respective contracts, Dany Boon (
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis)
and Sophie Marceau (
Les Femmes de l'ombre)
must have known that they would have an impossible job salvaging this
comedy disaster, and so they just treated it as it deserved, as a
tedious piece of pantomime for idiots living in a timewarp. It
says something that their performances, whilst unpardonably awful, are
the best thing the film has going for it. If either Boon or
Marceau had taken this seriously for one moment it would have been
about as enjoyable as being buried alive.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After ten years of married life, Ariane and Hugo are in danger of
slipping into a predictable routine that could be fatal for both their
careers and their future together. They therefore agree to swap
their jobs for one year. She will take over his job as the
manager of a firm that rents out construction equipment. He will
take her role as housewife and jewellery salesperson. It all
sounds very simple in theory. Practice is quite a different
matter...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.