Film Review
Biopics about saintly historical personages have been thin on the ground
for some time, and this makes Renaud Fely and Arnaud Louvet's
L'Ami: François
d'Assise et ses frères all the more welcome. Coming
at a time when the world has never been in greater need of St Francis's message
of universal love, a world where intolerance and violence seem to be on an
ever-upwards trajectory, along with greed and selfishness, Fely and Louvet's
sincerely meant hagiography will probably struggle to find the audience it
deserves but for those who are able to catch it before it disappears from
sight it offers a faint beacon of hope and a vision that we badly need to
hold onto if humanity is to survive into the next century. It's a very
different piece from the directors' previous film, the engaging romantic
drama
Pauline et François
(2010), but it shares that film's raw intimacy and uses its stunning rural
location (this time Languedoc) just as effectively to support the lowkey
drama that the film's authors craft with such delicacy.
The Italian actor Elio Germano is an inspired casting choice for the part
of Francis, bringing to his performance just the right balance of humanity
and fanaticism. Oddly, it is not Francis who is the film's focal point,
but his devoted disciple Elie de Cortone, portrayed with extraordinary conviction
by Jérémie Renier, an actor who needs no introduction and is
always at his best in modest, self-effacing films of this kind. Renier
and Germano make an effective contrast, and this is the film's strongest
suit - the opposing natures of the two principal protagonists being what
the film is primarily concerned with. Compared with the die-hard idealist
Francis, a man for whom the word 'compromise' does not exist, Elie is a pragmatist
who sees that without making some concessions to the all-powerful Chuch his
friend's mission is doomed to failure.
The film prompts us to reflect on the degree to which today's leaders must
betray their principles to have any positive impact on the world stage, and
you are left wondering whether it is ever possible to live up to one's ideals.
Far from being just a period piece,
L'Ami: François d'Assise et
ses frères has much to say about how things are today and how
pertinent St Francis's concerns still are - depressingly little has altered
in the last eight centuries. The film's modest production values, its
slow pace and lack of spectacle will doubtless prevent it from having as
much impact as it should. It doesn't have the devastating power of
Roberto Rossellini's
Saint
Francis, God's Jester (1950), nor the popular appeal of Michael Curtiz's
Francis of Assisi (1961), but Fely and Louvet's film touches the heart
and manages to be a worthy tribute to a great humanitarian whose philosophy
the world desperately needs to take heed of.
© James Travers 2017
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Film Synopsis
In Italy at the start of the 13th century, the son of a wealthy merchant
has turned his back on riches and now leads a simple life in the service
of the poor and infirm. He is Francis of Assisi, a young man committed
to doing good works and encouraging others to follow his example. His
one ambition is to bring about a world where peace and kindness prevail.
In his friend Elie de Cortone he has a faithful acolyte, but Elie is more
realistic than Francis, and more willing to abide by the rule of the Church
that looks on the modern day saint with suspicion. Pope Innocent III
is particularly concerned with Francis's apparent unwillingness to accept
the Church's authority. When Francis is unable to make the necessary
changes to the document that establishes a new order Elie steps in undertake
the task, knowing that for his friend to succeed some concessions must be
made...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.