Film Review
There was an irresistible ebullient charm to Arnaud Lemort's first film
L'Amour, c'est mieux à deux
(2010) (co-directed with Dominique Farrugia) which is singularly
lacking in his second.
Dépression
et des potes is a lazy attempt at an American-style comedy that
looks suspiciously like a half-hearted attempt to clamber aboard the
'buddy movie' bandwagon that has taken off in France in the wake of
Marc Esposito's
Le Coeur des hommes
(2003). Lemort's debut feature may have been impaired by some
misfired gags and an obvious lack of directorial competence but at
least it was enthusiastically performed by a likeable cast and had a
ring of truth about it. Its successor is little more than a low
grade television movie that looks as if it was cobbled together in
someone's lunchbreak.
Given the pedigree of the cast it's surprising how flat and unfunny the
film is. Fred Testot, a talented, very amiable stand-up comedian
and comic actor, ought to be in his element, but he is as ill-served by
the trite script as his three on-screen buddies, Jonathan Lambert,
Arié Elmaleh and Ary Abittan. All of the characters are
dull, overly familiar archetypes, and it's hard to miss the malodorous
whiff of misogynism that hangs over the proceedings. Admittedly,
the few worthwhile gags that punctuate this lame commentary on modern
living are well fielded but these are just too few and far between to
make the film worth watching. If you weren't depressed before you
started watching this derivative, trashy plod-a-thon you will be by the
time the end credits roll.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Franck has no reason to be unhappy with his life, but he is. He has
everything a man could possibly want to be happy - a nice home, an interesting
job, a delicious Brazilian girlfriend. And yet he is inconsolably and
constantly miserable. Nothing seems to satisfy him these days, not
even an expensive holiday in sun-kissed Mauritius. The first thing
he does when he gets back to Paris is to call in on his doctor, who merely
tells him what he already knows. He is chronically depressed.
Naturally, Franck passes this earth-shattering news on to his friends, and
they all make an effort to rally round and lift his spirits. But in
doing so they suddenly realise that they are as depressed as he is.
The only way they can overcome their depression is by banding together.
After all, this is what friends are for...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.