Film Review
When his first directorial offering,
Franz
(1971), proved to be a critical and commercial failure, Jacques Brel was
reluctant to direct another film but was persuaded to do so by Claude
Lelouch. Although Lelouch's contribution to
Far West was in the capacity of
producer, he might well have directed the film himself, so closely does
Brel imitate his zany style of humour (compare with
L'aventure c'est l'aventure),
cinematic excesses (swooping camera shots, many taken from a
helicopter) and almost total lack of screenwriting rigour.
Far West is silly and
self-indulgent but Brel's presence (on both sides of the camera) makes
it an amiable romp which reworks an old idea (Voltaire's
Candide springs readily to mind) in
the form of an amusing comicbook fantasy.
The gags are mostly awful, the plot almost non-existent and the
ludicrously over-the-top camera movements are guaranteed to give you
motion sickness, but there's also a great charm to the film, which
comes partly from Brel's musical interludes but also from the fact that
no one seems to be taking it remotely seriously. Predictably, the film
fared little better than its predecessor and Brel gave up directing
after this - in fact, he appeared in just one more film,
Édouard Molinaro's
L'Emmerdeur (1973). What
is perhaps most interesting about
Far
West is that the character Brel plays - a solitary dreamer in
search of some elusive idea of happiness - resembles Brel in his final
years, sailing the world and enjoying to the full the freedom that was
his.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Brel film:
Franz (1971)
Film Synopsis
Dressed as a cowboy, 40-year-old Jacques makes his way across
present-day Belgium in pursuit of a dream. He wants to go to the
Far West and begin a new life. On the way, he meets
Gabriel, a man dressed as Davy Crockett who shares his dream, and then
acquires a strange power from a failed illusionist. As they
search for their promised land, accidentally knocking down walls as
they go, Jacques and Gabriel are joined by some other misfits and
eventually they find the Far West, in the form of an abandoned
mine. Their adventure has just begun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.