Film Review
The musical was a genre that had disappeared from French cinema by the
mid-1990s and it is only recently that there has been a revival in its
popularity, following the success of Christophe Honoré's
Les Chansons d'amour
(2007). Released in 1998,
Jeanne
et le garçon formidable was a brave, some might say
reckless, attempt by first time directors Olivier Ducastel and Jacques
Martineau to apply the musical format to one of the most topical and
serious themes of the day, namely society's attitudes towards the AIDS
epidemic. Having worked with Jacques Demy as an assistant on his
final film,
Trois places pour le 26 (1988),
Ducastel was well-placed to offer an affectionate homage to Demy's
distinctive style of musical, which sometimes dressed grim subjects up
as kitsch musical fairytales.
Jeanne et le garçon formidable
is one of those unfortunate films that has its heart in the right place
but somehow falls down in the execution. It deserves credit for
treating an issue as sensitive as AIDS in a highly innovative and
compassionate way, without drowning in a sea of wearisome
emotionality. It boasts some impressive performances from its
lead actors, Virginie Ledoyen and Mathieu Demy (the son of Jacques
Demy), and supports, Jacques Bonnaffé and Valérie
Bonneton. It's an energetic and vibrant piece of cinema,
instantly redolent of those great films by Demy that inspired it, but,
likeable and courageous as it is, the film is painfully lacking in
substance and ends up looking like the final nail in the coffin of a
genre that has well and truly had its day.
The film's chief miscreant is a script that serves up the most
unconvincing, cliché sodden narrative inhabited by stereotypical
characters that scarcely make it into two dimensions. This would
have been forgiven were it not for the haphazard plot digressions that
take us away from the main story for no apparent reason, often with a
burst of bad taste and a song with the most excruciating lyrics.
The first musical number (a bunch of black office cleaners belly-aching
about their work and France's immigration policy) comes as such a shock
you wonder if the projectionist carelessly mixed up the reels.
Later, there's a weird musical number set in a lavatory that has a
plumber thanking his lucky stars that the toilet gets bunged up so
often. At the end of the film there's a sprightly little number
praising consumerism and credit cards which can hardly fail to turn
anyone's stomach, even if it was meant to be tongue-in-cheek.
The totally unimaginative plot follows the conventional boy-meets-girl,
girl-loses-boy scenario to a tee but comes unstuck in the final act
which leaves you with the impression that Ducastel and Martineau
couldn't be bothered to finish the film properly. Commendable
though the performances are (Ledoyen has never looked more spunky and
desirable, Demy doubly so), it's hard to engage with the characters
when they are handled in such a dispassionate and formulaic
manner. The most curious thing about the film is that Mathieu
Demy plays a man dying from AIDS, a full ten years before it was
revealed that his father had died from the disease. As
directing debuts go
Jeanne et le
garçon formidable was a promising start, and Ducastel and
Martineau followed it with another AIDS-themed drama, in the form of a
road movie -
Drôle de Félix
(2000).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Receptionist for a travel agency, Jeanne is looking for the man of her
dreams. So far, her amorous encounters have been a
disappointment, but she thinks she has struck lucky when she meets
Olivier, a boy who is totally unlike any she has ever met before.
But it turns out that he is HIV positive - and has been for six
years. This doesn't prevent the two young people from falling in
love and enjoying to the full their new-found happiness. One day,
Jeanne discovers that Olivier has gone away with his parents, without
leaving a new address. Jeanne immediately sets out to look for
him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.