Film Review
With a body of five well-regarded films under his
belt, director Cédric Kahn has established himself as one of
France's most promising young filmmakers. The diversity of his
films - ranging from the erotic drama
L'Ennui (1998) to the visceral
thriller
Roberto Succo (2001) - has also
earned him a reputation as someone who is very hard to pin down.
L'Avion, his latest film, continues
this pattern of unpredictability and it could hardly be more
different from anything that Kahn has made previously.
Inspired by Magda and Lapière's popular comic book
Charly,
L'Avion is unashamedly a film
for children, although grown-ups may succumb to its simplistic charms
and enjoy it just as much. The tough adult realism that is
present in Kahn's previous films is all but absent from this film,
which is perhaps best described as a cinematic fairytale. Viewed
from an adult perspective, the film fails completely. The plot
contrivances are too many and too obvious. The characters are
implausible (despite some very creditable performances) and the story
too fanciful to be taken seriously (particularly in the second half of the film).
However, from a child's point
of view, it does have a distinct appeal and it is no more objectionable
than any traditional fairy tale.
Anyone who attempts to view
L'Avion
as a straight drama is both wasting his time and completely
misunderstanding the point of the film. In adult terms, this is a
film which is intended to evoke something of the magic and confusion of
childhood, a phase in our lives when reality and fantasy really do
merge seemlessly together and anything appears to be possible. Of
course a child of eight can believe that an inanimate piece of matter
in the shape of an aeroplane can fly by itself. Of course he can
believe that this plane will take him to happier places where he will
have amazing adventures. Why do we tell children stories about
tooth fairies and Father Christmas if we expect them only to believe
what we know to be real?
L'Avion
reminds us what it was like to see the world through a child's eyes and
brings a new kind of realism to cinema - the strange and sadly ephemeral realism of childhood.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Cédric Kahn film:
Les Regrets (2009)
Film Synopsis
Christmas evening, eight-year-old Charly anxiously awaits the return of
his father, Pierre, to the family home. Pierre, an aerospace
engineer, is often away working on secret military projects, but he has
promised his son a bike for Christmas. Charly cannot hide his
disappointment when, instead of the bike he has been expecting, he
receives a model aeroplane. Pierre explains that he made it
himself, that a plane is a much better present than a bike, but Charly
is unimpressed. A few days later, Charly returns home from school
to find his mother in tears. His father has just died in an
accident. That evening, Charly's toy plane begins to take on a
life of its own. To the boy's amazement, the plane can move of
its own accord - as if it were alive...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.