Film Review
Having spent the last decade steadily learning her trade as an
assistant director on a diverse range of films - which include Corinne
Benizio's
Cabaret Paradis (2006),
Patrice Chéreau's
Persécution (2009) and
Cédric Klapisch's
Ma part du gâteau (2011)
- Cécilia Rouaud finally realised her ambition to become a fully
fledged film director with this engaging little rom-com.
Je me suis fait tout petit (the
title comes from a Georges Brassens song) has a very contemporary
theme, as it deals with the now all-too familiar problem of having to
get over a broken relationship and start a new life just as the
mid-life crisis kicks in. The subject lends itself naturally to
straight drama, but Rouaud opts for a more light-hearted approach
(redolent of Woody Allen's films) that encourages us to look on the
bright side, although her idea of humour is a little corny and
eccentric in places.
Whilst the film lets itself down in some areas (the script being its
obvious weak point), it is brilliantly cast and most of its charm stems
from the surprisingly effective rapport between the principal actors
Denis Ménochet and Vanessa Paradis. Ménochet is one
of the most exciting discoveries in French cinema in the last few
years. Having played minor roles for the past half-decade, he had
his big breakthrough with Mélanie Laurent's
Les
Adoptés (2011) and looks set to become as big a star
as Jean Dujardin. He comes across as a kind of young Robert De
Niro, outwardly tough and emotionless, but inwardly fragile and
sensitive. Despite his naturally lugubrious persona,
Ménochet has immense charm and conveys some extraordinary human
feeling in the film's quieter, more intimate scenes, in particular
those in which his character, Yvan, attempts to connect with his
unwanted adopted son, Léo.
Vanessa Paradis needs no introduction. Suffice it to say that she
is in her element in this kind of film and has seldom looked more
comfortable on the big screen, in a role that makes good use of her comedic
talents. Paradis could hardly be more different from
Ménochet and the chalk-and-cheese pairing works remarkably
well. In contrast to Ménochet's moodily introverted Yvan,
Paradis's Emmanuelle is the bubbly modern miss on steroids, and the
fact that the two actors have such a potent on-screen chemistry proves
the point that opposites attract. It is the most weirdly inspired
coupling since Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. The only let
down is that Paradis's character is far less well-developed than
Ménochet's - she feels more like a cute male fantasy than a
genuinely credible character. Luckily, Paradis draws our
attention away from this fact by making her character so colourful and
amusing.
Vanessa Paradis is not the only member of the cast who has to work hard
to bridge the credibility gap created by the script.
Most of the characters are thinly
sketched caricatures that do only what the plot is required of
them. To a degree, this hardly matters, as most of the film
revolves around its two lead protagonists - are we really that
concerned with the life story of Yvan's sister and headmaster? As
with the casting of Vanessa Paradis, Cécilia Rouaud manages to
cover this deficiency by throwing bags of charisma and acting skill at
it. The supporting cast positively glows with talent and includes
Grégory Gadebois and Louise Grinberg, two of the biggest finds
of 2011 (the former revealed in Alix Delaporte's
Angèle et Tony, the
latter in Delphine and Muriel Coulin's
17
filles), with ample back-up from Laurent Lucas and Léa Drucker, two
superb established actors favoured by auteur filmmakers. In his
screen debut, David Carvalho-Jorge manages to eclipse most of the above
as the angelic little boy Léo who triggers Yvan's emotional
reawakening.
Je me suis fait tout petit
does struggle to be convincing at times, and the surfeit of
clichés and plot contrivances does become wearisome after a
while, but it is not without charm. Despite her long
apprenticeship. Cécilia Rouaud falls into many of the pitfalls
that a first-time film director is prone to, but she still manages to
deliver a film that is well worth seeing, one that is engaging, funny
and humane. However, the one person who deserves the lion's share
of the credit for making this such an involving film is Denis
Ménochet, an actor who clearly has a great future ahead of him.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
There is nothing to keep Yvan in Paris. A 30-something
schoolteacher, he is ready to pack up and start a new life somewhere
else. It has been five years since his wife left him to live with
her new lover in Thailand. Since, he has mooched about, uncertain
what to do next with his life. His teenage daughters have left
him, preferring to live with his sister Ariane than the miserable,
prematurely middle-aged man he has become. Just when Yvan has made up
his mind to leave Paris, two people enter his life and arouse him from
his emotional slumbers. They are: Léo, the product of his
ex-wife's love affair with another man, and Emmanuelle, a vivacious
colleague at the school where he works. Yvan soon discovers he
has two reasons to stay and rebuild his life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.