Film Review
Time and again, director Jean-Jacques Beineix found it hard to repeat the success of his
first film,
Diva
(1981), and although some of his subsequent work has some artistic merit,
much of it really does deserve to be forgotten. His fifth film,
IP5
, has all the telltale signs of a director who is desperately flailing about for
new ideas in an attempt to affirm his artistic credentials. Fleeting moments
of unbridled creative genius punctuate a film that is ponderous, pretentious and ludicrously
lacking in narrative coherence.
With its laughably implausible, rambling narrative and wafer-thin characterisation,
the film would be unwatchable were it not for one essential element: Yves Montand. The
latter's enigmatic and highly poignant portrayal of a tree-hugging mystic who has been
scarred by both love and life is the only thing in this film which is capable of sustaining
our interest. The main selling point of
IP5
is that it is Yves Montand's final film - the actor died very shortly after the filming
was completed, from a heart attack (as did the character he played in the film).
© James Travers 2006
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Jacques Beineix film:
Mortel transfert (2001)
Film Synopsis
Street graffiti artist Tony and his child rap-obsessed companion Jockey are heading for
Grenoble to deliver a consignment of overgrown gnomes for some skinheads. En route,
Tony changes his mind, gives up his mission, and decides instead to pursue the woman he
has fallen in love with, a young nurse who has just moved to Toulouse. When the
car they first steal runs out of petrol, Tony and Jockey make off with another, not realising
that there is someone lying in the back seat. The stranger - a mysterious old man
named Leon - proves to be harder to shake off than the two youngsters would like.
Once Leon has saved their bacon on two occasions, Tony and Jockey decide to tag along
with him. Leon has his own quest - to find the woman who stole his heart so
many years ago. But why is he carrying a loaded gun?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.