Film Review
Karnaval, the debut feature from director
Thomas Vincent, serves up a familiar love triangle tale set in the less familiar
setting of a provincial working class community in a French coastal town at carnival time.
The film has as many weak points as strong points, but it reveals in its author
(son of the distinguished actress Hélène Vincent) a writer-director of considerable promise.
The spectacular vibrancy and colour of the film's setting is unfortunately not matched
by the calibre of the script, which is drab, directionless and lacking in originality.
There is some promising acting talent in the cast, but this is not fully exploited, and
none of the principal characters appear to have any great depth. Sylvie Testud is
particularly poorly served, some risible dialogue hampering her performance throughout.
Only Clovis Cornillac (who plays Béa's luckless husband) really manages to make
something of the material he is given. Vincent and Cornillac would
later team up for another, very different film,
Le Nouveau protocole (2008).
The film's nadir is the outrageous dog-burning scene near the end of the film.
Although the effect is competently realised, the response of the actors following the
stunt is so flaccid and vacuous as to render the scene ludicrous. After that, the
film has a job holding on to its credibility.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Thomas Vincent film:
Le Nouveau protocole (2008)
Film Synopsis
After a dispute with his father, a young Arab man Larbi decides to leave his home town
of Dunkirk and head south to start a new life in Marseilles. Having missed the last
train to Marseilles, he shelters from the rain in the stairwell of a block of apartments,
where he is disturbed by two carnival revellers, Béa and her husband Christian,
a docker. Larbi helps Béa carry her drunken husband to her apartment, and
she thanks him by giving him a parting kiss. Larbi leaves to catch his train, but
then decides to stay in Dunkirk, realising that he has fallen in love with Béa…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.