Film Review
Marc Caro and Jean-Pierre Jeunet's debut feature took the world by
storm when it was first released in 1991, proving to be that rarest of
phenomenon: an art house film that became an immediate mainstream
success.
With its distinctive design and sharp, ochre-saturated
cinematography, its zany humour and collection of
oddball characters,
Delicatessen
was bound to be a cult hit, endlessly parodied in commercials and
helping to totally redefine the look of sci-fi films in the 1990s,
bringing a new sense of unreality and greater visual impact to fantasy
cinema. The film was not only a major box office hit across the
world, it was also almost universally well-received by the
critics. It was nominated for ten Césars in 1992 and won
four awards, in the categories of Best Screenplay, Best Design, Best
Editing and Best First Work. There had never been a film like
Delicatessen before, and there
probably never will be again. This is a film that takes
strangeness to new heights and almost makes it an artform in its own
right.
A résumé of the film's story gives a somewhat false
impression. With its references to cannibalism and mad
cleaver-waving butchers, you might think this was a vicious horror
film, in the familiar slasher vein, but far from it.
Delicatessen is a joyously
exuberant farce, of the typically French variety, consisting of
numerous moments of laugh-out-loud hilarity and some genuinely
eye-popping set-pieces.
The former includes the famous bed squeaking sequence (in which the butcher's love-making exploits provide
the tempo for the other tenants' routine activities, building to a
devastating tyre-bursting crescendo), whilst the best example of the
latter is the scene in which the hero escapes the butcher's knife by
flooding the entire building (liberating an army of frogs in the
process). Whilst they may appear somewhat dated by today's
standards, the film's special effects (including some early digit
effects and daring use of computer-controlled photography) were
state-of-the-art at the time - remarkable when you consider that the
film was made on a relatively modest budget. (Caro and Jeunet
spent many fruitless years trying to secure financial backing for the
film. Apparently, no one wanted to produce a film in which the
characters used grain as a substitute for money).
The main appeal of
Delicatessen
is its ensemble of eccentric characters, who are played to comic
perfection by an extremely talented cast. Dominique Pinon brings
the appropriate mix of humour and pathos to his portrayal of the hero
Louison, and is beautifully complemented by his co-star Marie-Laure
Dougnac, who is both funny and endearing as the myopic love-lorn
Julie. Jean-Claude Dreyfus revels in the meatiest role as the
cleaver-swinging butcher, a part that elevated him from the status of a fairly
unknown character actor to national celebrity.
Karin Viard was near the start of her illustrious career
when she appeared in this film, in a role that could hardly be further
from the one she is now known for, in highbrow
films d'auteur. The film's
strangest character, the man who lives like an amphibian in a flooded
room inhabited by snails and frogs, is played by none other than Howard
Vernon, a highly regarded actor who is best known for playing the
German officer in Jean-Pierre Melville's
Le Silence de la Mer
(1949). It's a strange life being an actor. One minute
you're playing a member of the master race, the next you're up to your
knees in freezing cold water with ping pong balls in your eyes, doing
lizard impressions.
Prior to
Delicatessen, Caro
and Jeunet had made a handful of short films together, of which the
best known is
Le Bunker de la
dernière rafale (1981). Caro's background was in
graphic design so it is no surprise that he (supported by
cinematographer Darius Khondji) was most responsible for
Delicatessen's unusual look, which,
with its strong visual contours and weird ambiance has something of the
classic French
bande dessinée
feel to it. Jeunet's input was more that of the
conventional
metteur en scène,
directing the actors - which he did by using some improvisational
techniques, such as telling one actor to do something of which the
other actors were unaware, to get a spontaneous reaction.
Caro and Jeunet worked together on one further feature -
La Cité des enfants perdus
(1995) - before pursuing separate careers. Jeunet would be asked
to direct the fourth entry in the
Alien
series,
Alien: Resurrection (1997), and
would score a notable worldwide hit with his subsequent
Le Fabuleux destin d'Amélie Poulain
(2001), which owes a great deal to the groundbreaking design and sheer
off-the-wall bizarreness of
Delicatessen.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Marc Caro film:
La Cité des enfants perdus (1995)