Film Review
With one popular short film under his belt,
the enjoyable
Versailles Rive-Gauche (1992),
director Bruno Podalydès makes his feature debut with
Dieu seul me voit,
a sequel of sorts to this earlier film.
The director's brother Denis - a well-known and well-regarded actor - not only takes the lead role,
a likeable Woody Allen-style inadequate, but also had a large hand in the
writing of the film, which very nearly ended up as an eight-hour long
magnum opus. Ultimately, the film was pared back to a more marketable
two-hour long feature, although a longer version comprising six one-hour
long episodes and entitled
Dieu seul me voit, version interminable
was released as a DVD box set in 2008.
Dieu seul me voit is a light romantic comedy that can hardly
fail to please, the Podalydès brothers' quirky and often absurdist humour bringing a fresh, unfamiliar
edge to a well-worn genre. Denis Podalydès' well-meaning but seemingly
doomed attempts to find his ideal woman are a delight to watch but the
main attraction are some unexpected excursions towards the surreal, such
as a bizarre blood donor sequence. The icing on the cake is the final
segment of the film in which our unsuccessful Don Juan attempts to ply
a splendiferous Jeanne Balibar with his self-effacing charms - it's like
watching a ritual sacrifice in slow motion.
A commercial and critical success, the film was honoured with the César
for the Best First Work in 1999.
A decade on, the Podalydès brothers would complete their
Versailles trilogy with
Bancs publics (Versailles rive droite) (2009).
© James Travers 2002
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Next Bruno Podalydès film:
Liberté-Oléron (2001)
Film Synopsis
Albert, a shy absent-minded sound engineer, is coming to a mid-life crisis. Despite
his best attempts, he still has not found the woman of his dreams - but that looks set
to change. Whilst working on a political campaign in Toulouse, he meets a nurse,
Sophie, who draws him into a romantic liaison which ends when her ex-boyfriend makes an
unwelcome return. Later, back in Paris, he has a one-night stand with a police woman,
Corine, without realising that their night of passion is being relayed by his mobile phone
to her jealous boyfriend. Then there is the dinner date with a documentary film
maker Anna, which looks promising, until Albert starts to have an uncontrollable fit of
vomiting...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.