Gaspard et Robinson (1990) Directed by Tony Gatlif
Comedy / Drama
Film Review
This bittersweet comedy makes a poignant statement about the importance of friendship
and family in an increasingly fragmented society. Beautifully filmed, with
an attractive score from Michel Legrand, this is a film which appeals perhaps more to
the senses than to the intellect. The on-screen rapport between Gérard Darmon
and Vincent Lindon is both touching and entertaining, and each of their characters is
well-drawn and believable. There are also some great comic moments in the
film, although such comedy is used sparingly. The main fault with the film is that
there is really very little in the way of plot or character development and the film drags
painfully in places, apprently having lost sight of where it is heading.
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Film Synopsis
Although temperamentally very different, Gaspard and Robinson have become
the closest of friends. After his wife walked out on him on hearing
that he had lost his job, Gaspard found his recurring bouts of depression
hard to cope with, until the happy day when he met Robinson. Even though
his parents abandoned him when he was a small boy, the latter has an unerring
knack of looking on the bright side of life. As they wander around
Marseille, the two friends agree to open a beach café on the barren
salt marshes. One day, Robinson takes pity on an old woman looking
lost and abandoned by the side of a road and invites her back to his home.
Gaspard isn't exactly overjoyed when his buddy suggests they should allow
the strange old woman to stay with them...
American film comedy had its heyday in the 1920s and '30s, but it remains an important genre and has given American cinema some of its enduring classics.