Film Review
In 2010, director Michel Leclerc notched up a notable critical and commercial
hit with his second feature,
Le Nom
des gens, winning the 2011 César for Best Screenplay with
his co-writer and real-life partner Baya Kasmi. By comparison his first
film,
J'invente rien, made four years previously, came and went virtually
unnoticed, despite the highly enticing presence of Elsa Zylberstein and Kad
Merad in the lead roles. Prior to this, Leclerc had cut his professional
teeth on French television, first as an editor, then gravitating to writer
and director, on such shows as
Nulle part ailleurs and
Âge
sensible.
J'invente rien is one of those slight, unpretentious French comedies
that is all too easy to overlook, not helped by the fact that it is the work
of a first-time director. A gentle satire on modern life and the problems
of conjugal living, the film is somewhat lacking in substance, but it makes
up for this with the inspired casting, that offers the combined talents of
two of French cinema's most likeable stars - Kad Merad and Elsa Zylberstein
- with Patrick Chesnais and Claude Brasseur making their presence felt in
two made-to-measure (albeit slightly offbeat) supporting roles. Low-key
to a fault,
J'invente rien is unlikely to leave much of a lasting
impression, but whilst it lasts it makes fun viewing, the gentle humour periodically
pepped up by some slightly surreal digressions and shrewd observations on
modern life.
© James Travers 2007
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Film Synopsis
Paul Thalman and Mathilde Mahut would appear to have nothing in common.
Yet, from the moment they first set eyes on one another they know at once
they were meant to be together. Paul is one of life's perpetual dreamers
- the eternal adolescent who is unlikely ever to hold down an ordinary job
for more than five minutes. Mathilde is the practical one, the one
who has the sense and maturity to earn herself a modest crust as an artist
and decorator so that she can support them both. After five years of
living together in Paris, Mathilde feels the time has come for her other
half to go out and get himself some paid employment, but he remains convinced
that he destined for better things. Paul's dream is to invent something
that will bring him not just fame and fortune, but also the everlasting admiration
of his by now exasperated life partner. One day his patience is rewarded
when inspiration strikes suddenly like a bolt of lightning. His brainchild
is a revolutionary new gadget that is guaranteed to make shopping bags easier
to carry. So certain is Paul of success that he immediately throws
everything he has into his new venture. As he does so he is totally
oblivious to the fact that he may be about to lose Mathilde to another man...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.