Film Review
Floride marks the welcome
return of Jean Rochefort to French cinema in his first leading role in
a French film in almost a decade, and one that is more than worthy of his talents.
For the past ten years, Rochefort has had to content himself with
voiceover work or roles in lesser films that are perhaps best
forgotten, most recently
Astérix & Obélix: Au
service de sa Majesté (2012). In Philippe Le
Guay's
Floride, he is back on
form in what is probably his most challenging role to date, that of a
strong-willed octogenarian gradually succumbing to the effects of
dementia. The film is adapted from Florian Zeller's 2012 stage
play
Le Père, which
had Robert Hirsch playing the lead in a multiple-award-winning
production.
The films of Philippe Le Guay form an eclectic mix which includes the
hard-hitting social drama
Trois huit (2001), quirky
social comedy
Les Femmes du 6ème étage
(2011) and witty culture-clash comedy
Alceste à bicyclette
(2013).
Floride does
nothing to alter this fact and is as boldly idiosyncratic as Le Guay's
previous films, one that attempts the seemingly impossible feat of
trying to make light of the condition we most dread, a degenerative
brain disorder. It would have been so much easier to follow the
example of Michael Haneke's
Amour (2012) and show the
wasting effect of old age as something truly grim and
devastating. Le Guay's film tries to get us to see the funnier
side, paying more than lip service to Chaplin's observation that "Life
is a tragedy when seen in close-up, but a comedy in long-shot."
The immense hurdle that Le Guay has to overcome is that our perception
and fears about dementia are such that it is hard to accept it as a
suitable subject for humour. There are scenes in
Floride which, whilst
well-intentioned, are more likely to turn your stomach than provoke
laughter. Yet, mildly provocative though the film is, it deserves
credit for tackling a difficult theme in such an innovative and good
humoured way - if it helps to make dementia and the wider issue of
growing old less of a taboo subject then it will have more than done
its job.
And Le Guay doesn't just go for easy laughs. The film starts in a
broad comic vein, with Jean Rochefort clearly losing his marbles as an
old man behaving disgracefully, a naughty child one minute, a
cantankerous monster the next. But by the end of the film, the
tone is completely different - the camera has moved in and now the
comedy has turned to something more likely to stir the emotions.
As Le Guay draws us nearer to the central protagonist and those who
have to find a way to deal with his condition we acquire a greater
awareness of what dementia really is - a slow and irreversible erasure
of one's identity, as harrowing for the sufferer as it is for those who
have to support him or her during the possibly long years of
decline. Le Guay's approach, however, is more life-affirming than
depressing.
Lherminier's eccentric episodes (which exploit Rochefort's dramatic and
comedic range to the full) show how a dispassionate outsider would look
on an Alzheimer's sufferer. It's just a strange old man doing
what strange old men do when the inhibitions follow the marbles down
the drain. It is only when we begin to see how Lherminier is
affected by his condition that the film's emotional force begins to
assert itself, in subtle but effective ways. Flashbacks and
flights of fancy intrude on the narrative and show the main character
gradually slipping into an alternative reality where time has no
meaning - past, present and future merge into a single muddled state of
being. The 'Florida' of the film's title isn't a geographical
destination, it is a mental one - like the mysterious Rosebud in
Citizen
Kane, it is a key that unlocks a door to a past to which the
main character wants desperately to return. As Lherminier sinks
deeper into this timeless 'living death', his daughter Carole (played
with the charm and conviction we have come to expect of Sandrine
Kiberlain) is left feeling helpless, and it is she who steals our
sympathies in the film's more downbeat second half.
Floride could have worked
effectively if Le Guay had taken the easy option of sticking to the
source text and making it a filmed piece of theatre. Instead, he
opens it out and projects it onto a broader canvas which makes
effective use of its pretty location in the picturesque French town of
Annecy. The central characters are given greater depth by placing
them in a vivid real setting - the sorry state of Lherminier's present
condition is underscored by the fact he was the man who created a
thriving paper-making business, and his daughter Carole's concerns are
emphasised by the strains these place on her relationships with her
grown-up son and partner (the latter played by Laurent Lucas in an
unusually sympathetic role). Anamaria Marinca equally has a solid
presence as a no-nonsense carer who knows how to put Lherminier in his
place.
Tackling a notoriously difficult subject in such an off-the-wall
manner,
Floride is a film
that is unlikely to please everyone. The over-generous runtime is
a sign that Le Guay may have perhaps overstretched himself and, beset
with a patchy and uneven narrative, the film certainly doesn't quite
achieve the cohesion of some of the director's previous work.
However, whilst the journey is not as smooth as you may wish, the film
leaves you feeling that it has dealt honestly and sensitively with its
subject matter. The suspicion that this might well prove to be
Jean Rochefort's swansong - the crowning achievement of a truly
remarkable career - lends the film an additional poignancy, although it
could equally be the beginning of a massive comeback...
© James Travers 2015
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Next Philippe Le Guay film:
Trois huit (2001)