Film Review
On the face of it,
Deux jours
à tuer would appear to be a strange digression for
director Jean Becker into much darker territory than he is known
for. Those whose experience of Becker is limited to his whimsical
rural comedies
Les Enfants du marais (1999)
and
Dialogue avec mon jardinier (2007)
will be surprised by the viciously misanthropic and melancholic tone of
this latest film. Those with a wider appreciation of his work
will be somewhat less shocked. After all, this is the same Jean
Becker who brought us the decidedly visceral thriller
L'Été
meurtrier (1983) and the ever-so slightly sick black comedy
Un crime au paradis
(2001). Jean Becker is a far more versatile filmmaker than most
people give him credit for.
Deux jours à tuer had a
lukewarm reception when it was first released, partly because it had been heavily promoted as a
mystery drama. From the outset, the film looks like the usual
mid-life crisis binge and initially appears to be an obvious rip-off of
Jan Kounen's
99 francs (2007).
When his ideas for marketing a cure-all dairy product are dismissed by his client,
a middle-aged advertising executive goes off the rails and starts
behaving like a teeange delinquent with attitude. Having
quit his job, insulted his friends and given his kid's artwork
the full Brian Sewell treatment (cruel, so cruel), he walks out on his wife and buggers off to
Ireland to visit his dad. The film attempts to make all this look
like a murder mystery, but you have to be pretty thick and
unimaginative not to have sussed the explanation as to why Mr Grumpy
behaves as he does within twenty minutes or so. When the solution
to the
soi-disant mystery is
finally unveiled the element of surprise is conspicuous by its
absence. It is a bit like watching an Agatha Christie story in
which Hercule Poirot accidentally lets slip the identity of the murderer
before the crime has been
committed.
Deux jours à tuer fails
as a mystery and it also comes pretty close to failing as a piece of
drama. Auteur gimmicks like camerashake and some botched attempts at comedy
provide needless distractions from the film's emotional core
and rob it of the authenticity which the story merits.
The only scenes that ring true are those near the
end of the film where Antoine makes his peace with his estranged
father, two handed sequences involving male characters being something
that Becker does particularly well - evidenced by
Dialogue avec mon jardinier.
That the film works as well as it does is almost entirely down to Becker's
inspired choice of lead actor.
Albert Dupontel is ideally suited for the ambiguous tragicomic part that he plays in
this film. Even when he is catapulted unceremoniously by his
director into a sea of stale old clichés (Becker's
portrayal of the Irish is particularly cringeworthy), Dupontel never fails to deliver the goods. Here, his acting
skills are tested to breaking point but he still manages to turn in a
performance that is harrowingly convincing, one that is characterised
by its brooding intensity and a sense of slowly mounting despair.
Albert Dupontel's star presence is just about the only thing going for
this film. Thanks to Becker's heavy-handed direction and
a generally lacklustre screenplay (a pretty guileless adaptation of a novel
by François d'Épenoux), the film's attempts to play the mystery card soon
become wearisome. A mediocre script seldom inspires better than mediocre
performances so it is hardly surprising that the contributions from
Dupontel's co-stars (with the obvious exception of Pierre Vaneck) are nothing to write home about. Out of the
entire ensemble of cast and crew, only Dupontel seems motivated to give
the film his best shot and it's a pity that, given he is an
accomplished filmmaker himelf, he was not in a position to
direct it himself. Killing time is just about all this film is good for.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Becker film:
La Tête en friche (2010)
Film Synopsis
Forty-something Antoine Méliot has everything a man could
possibly want to be happy - a well-paid job, a beautiful wife, two
adorable children, a nice house, and friends he can always rely
on. But then one day, on the spur of the moment, he makes the
decision to throw it all away. His job, his marriage, his
friendships... Within one weekend, he sets out to destroy everything
that was once dear to him. What could have driven him to
behave in such a bizarre manner...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.