Film Review
One of the most worrying sociological trends in recent years is a
declining recognition of the value of specialisation in all spheres of
human activity. The prevailing mindset (in education, the
workplace, etc.) seems to be that it is far better to be reasonably
competent at a broad range of things than excellent at just a
few. One area where this trend is particularly noticeable
is that of cinema. In the past, those involved in filmmaking
tended to stick to their own sphere of expertise, and so individuals
gravitated to those areas for which they had a natural talent and were
able to develop that talent to its fullest. Recently, however,
the craze for generalisation has led established actors, writers,
editors, critics and just about anyone who happens to pass a film set
to try their hand at directing, and in most cases you can't help
lamenting the waste of time and celluloid. It takes more than ego
to make a film that is worth watching, and yet everyone seems to want
to be a film director these days.
Jalil Lespert is just one of many highly respected French actors to
turn to film directing in recent years. Undeterred by the
lukewarm reaction to his debut feature
24 Mesures (2007) he persevered
and served up a second tepid helping of direction-by-numbers, although
this time the critics were generally kinder to him.
Des vents contraires is by no means
a bad film, but it lacks finesse and ambition and could pass for a
rather mundane television film. Anyone who has seen Lespert
perform in such films as
Ressources humaines (1999),
Vivre
me tue (2002) and
Le Petit lieutenant (2005)
cannot fail to appreciate his talent as an actor, but from his first
two directing efforts it is evident that he has no special aptitude
for filmmaking.
Des vents contraires (a.k.a.
Headwinds) is based
on a best-selling novel by Olivier Adam and follows two other more
successful adaptations of his work: Jean-Pierre Améris'
Poids léger (2004) and
Philippe Lioret's
Je vais bien, ne t'en fais pas (2006).
The fact that Adam collaborated on the screenplay is a definite plus,
although the narrative could have benefited from a little judicious
pruning. The abundance of secondary characters and half-developed
subplots detracts from the central story strand and weakens the
film, which would have done better to focus on the central character,
whose life is complicated enough to warrant the extra attention. (The characters played by Ramzy
Bedia and Bouli Lanners, whilst interesting, are an unnecessary
distraction.) The uneven narrative prevents the film from
cohering into a satisfying whole and it ends up being torn between
being a realist family drama and a rather lame mystery thriller.
Lespert's direction is at best workmanlike, at worst shockingly
complacent. With more careful editing, many of the faults could
have been corrected, but often the editing is as clueless as the
direction, so that many scenes feel badly paced and
overlong. The film's one saving grace is that it is very
well cast and the failings in the direction and writing are, to a large
degree, compensated for by the credible performances supplied by the top-notch cast.
Benoît Magimel (who incidentally starred in Lespert's first film)
is convincing as the broken down father who is compelled to try to
rebuild his life when his wife (Audrey Tautou) mysteriously
disappears. Magimel is at his best when he plays neurotic,
fragile outsiders, and so the part Lespert gives him allows him to play
to his strengths. Antoine Duléry is even more impressive
in the role of Magimel's older brother, a character that deserves to
have been developed further and given greater focus (even at the
expense of removing some of the lesser characters). Josée
Deshaies' cinematography is probably the film's strongest suit - the
rugged Breton setting is beautifully captured and effectively reflects
the changing inner moods of the main protagonist. David Moreau's
score provides a similar function and adds greatly to the film's muted
lyricism.
Des vents contraires has all
the failings you would expect to find in a first film from a less than
confident filmmaker, but it also a certain amount of charm. To
its credit, whilst it is occasionally saccharine in places, it never
gets overly sentimental and the restrained performances prevent it from
degenerating into soap-style melodrama (well, almost). The plot
is the main stumbling block - there are too many kingsize loaves in the
oven (which someone appears to have forgotten to light) and the ending
is just too contrived to be taken seriously. All the same, a film
that boasts the combined talents of Benoît Magimel, Isabelle
Carré and Audrey Tautou cannot be all bad, and whilst the end
result is far from perfect it is a reasonably satisfactory
timewaster. However, you can't help wishing that Jalil
Lespert had stuck with what he does best. We can't all be Cecil B
DeMille...
© James Travers 2012
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Next Jalil Lespert film:
Yves Saint Laurent (2014)
Film Synopsis
Paul Anderen, a writer living in Paris, has his life turned upside down
when his wife Sarah suddenly goes missing. After a year of
fruitless searching, Paul is a broken man. His only hope is to
try and start a new life with his two young children in Saint-Malo, the
town in Brittany where he grew up. His older brother gives him a
job as an instructor in his driving school and he is soon pursuing an
affair with a younger woman. Just when Paul appears to be getting
his life back on track he starts receiving anonymous phone calls.
He persuades the police to reopen the case into his missing wife...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.