Film Review
"It is a tale... full of sound and fury, signifying nothing..."
This lament from Shakespeare's 'Scottish play' feels cruelly
appropriate for Tony Gatlif's most Shakespearean film to date, a
grittily rumbustious social musical that rages with the untamed frenzy
of a forest fire for much of its daunting 100 minute runtime but
somehow fails to add up to anything of any real substance.
Admirers of Gatlif will tend to agree that, in France at least, he is
pretty well unsurpassed when it comes to making films that blaze with
vitality and colour - who could not fail to be stunned by the sheer
spectacle of
Latcho Drom
(1993)? He is also virtually unrivalled in helping us to see the
world from the perspective of society's underdogs, be they persecuted
gypsies or unwelcome immigrants. Tony Gatlif remains one of the
most idiosyncratic and individualistic filmmakers of our time, but he has
yet to master the art of constructing a coherent narrative with solid,
believable characters, and this is where his latest cinematic
extravaganza falls down.
Geronimo shows both the best
and worst sides of Gatlif's art. As a social portrait depicting a
frenzied outburst of clan rivalry in the south of France it is vivid
but not particularly convincing. The characters are, without
exception, thinly sketched archetypes awkwardly portrayed by mostly
non-professional actors who, for the most part, appear
under-directed. Even the central protagonist, a tough, streetwise
educator (nicknamed Geronimo) who somehow manages to instil fear and respect into the
lawless hotheads she has to deal with, fails to ring true, despite a
credible performance from Céline Sallette. After a
promising first twenty minutes, the plot loses momentum, goes
completely out of control and ultimately peters out, so that nothing seems
to be resolved satisfactorily. It is as if Gatlif lost interest in the film and
just gave up.
So much for the film's bad points. On the plus side,
Geronimo is as vibrant and
energetic a film as Gatlif has made so far. The grand musical
set-pieces are inspired works of art in their own right, offering an
improbable but strangely effective fusion of music and dance from
various cultures (Spanish and Turkish folk tradition livened up with
the odd burst of Verdi and hip-hop). The overall effect is a kind
of wild, Latin/Turkish version of
West
Side Story, and if only the camerawork had been a little more
consistent the result would have been stunning. Unfortunately, in
trying to maintain the same level of energy throughout the rest of the
film, Gatlif merely succeeds in rendering virtually every scene
excessively hysterical. For the drama to be effective, there
needs to be a greater contrast of mood and tone, but this is what the
film lacks.
Geronimo
has an exhilarating passion to it but it lacks focus and this is what
ultimately undermines a film that could so easily have been one of
Gatlif's best.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the south of France, in the sweltering heat of August, Geronimo, a
young teacher, is committed to easing tensions between young people in
the district of Saint Pierre. A crisis flares up when Nil Terzi,
a teenager of Turkish origin, flees from an arranged marriage so that
she can be with her true love, a young gypsy named Lucky Molina.
As two gangs suddenly come to blows, Geronimo does everything she can
to halt the madness that has suddenly taken possession of the region...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.