Film Review
If only its authors Étienne Labroue and Marc Bruckert had been able
to come up with a more ample plot for this cinematic oddity,
L'Élan
could easily have been one of the cult fantasies of the year. A madcap
micro-budget fable (presumably on the theme of acceptance of 'the other'
or a celebration of the individual), in which planet Earth is invaded by
the most unconvincing alien imaginable (basically it's a tall man in a raincoat
with a felt animal head stuck on his head),
L'Élan is cutely
weird for at least twenty minutes, but after this time the joke has well
and truly worn thin.
So ludicrously cheap and off-the-wall is the film, and so indefinably odd
is its humour, that it's hard to resist giving it a go, but the effort of
sitting through what is effectively a short filmed stretched way beyond its
natural length isn't rewarded by the content. It's not the lack of
budget that is the problem (I doubt whether the film cost more than a few
hundred euross to make) but the fact that not enough thought went into the
script. Labroue and Bruckert have the germ of a brilliant concept here
but somehow it just didn't receive the tender loving care it needed to turn
it into a fully fledged feature film. For all its likeable quirkiness,
L'Élan is regrettably nothing more than a still-born foetus
of a film.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When a strange creature suddenly appears in a small town in the west of
France it immediately attracts the attention of the town's residents.
No one knows what to make of the curious being that is wrapped in a long
brown coat and has a fur head shaped like that of a stag. Could this
be the start of an alien invasion? A genetic mutation? An undiscovered
life-form native to Earth? Or just someone having a lark? There
is no shortage of theories. The ones who show most interest in this
remarkable creature are a pharmacist, some trigger-happy game hunters and
a self-proclaimed specialist in extraterrestrials...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.