Film Review
It has been almost twenty years since Jacques-Yves Cousteau died and already
his memory is beginning to fade. The charismatic white-haired man in
the red woolly hat, whose television programmes introduced millions to the
undersea world long before the BBC nature documentarists got there, was a
television icon in the early 1970s, as well as being an important pioneer
of marine conservation. It was to preserve Cousteau's memory that director
Jérôme Salle embarked on his biggest adventure yet, a big budget
biopic charting the extraordinary career of this remarkable individual after
he quit the French navy at the end of the 1940s.
Salle had by this time already made an impact as a director of gutsy action
thrillers such as
Anthony Zimmer
(2005) and
Largo Winch (2008), but despite his obvious admiration
for Cousteau he was probably the wrong person to direct this film.
Instead of a rigorous biopic that probes the man as much as his passion for
the sea what Salle turns in is a rather ponderous family drama, which is
more trashy soap opera than biographical portrait. Salle comes into
his own with the film's extraordinary underwater set-pieces, which have enough
of a visual impact to take your breath away, but when he turns the camera
on Cousteau and tries to get a grip on his complex and often contradictory
nature he fails to dip so much as a tentative toe beneath the surface.
With a substantial budget and an impressive big name cast,
L'Odyssée
promises much but delivers barely a fraction of what Cousteau's admirers
have been waiting for. It's a step up from Wes Anderson's caricature
of the man in his American comedy
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
(2004), but not much.
Thanks to an impressive make-up job, Lambert Wilson just manages to acquire
a
passing resemblance to Cousteau and he imitates his mannerisms without
making his performance an obvious caricature. There is a tantalising
hint of an incredibly complex individual just under the surface of Wilson's
engaging portrayal, but thanks to a hopelessly banal screenplay this is one
fascinating ocean the film doesn't feel inclined to visit. The other
characters are even more sketchily drawn, so that actors as capable as Audrey
Tautou and Pierre Niney fail to do much with their portrayals of Cousteau's
wife and son respectively. Some other characters come off even worse
and look like the worst kind of stereotype.
Most of this sluggish and uneven film is preoccupied with Cousteau's ruthless
business deals and his problematic relationship with his son Philippe, who
was apparently concerned with environmental issues years before Cousteau
Senior was (hence their many fallings out). There is an awful lot of additional
detail which is too hastily glossed over to be of any interest. By
trying to cover so much territory, the film ends up delivering the thinnest
and most insubstantial of portraits of a man who is as profound and changeable
as the oceans he explored. Still, whilst massively disappointing as
a biopic, the film is at least partly redeemed by its stunning underwater
sequences, which go some way to recreating the sense of wonder that television
audiences felt back in the 1970s whilst watching Cousteau's underwater adventures
for the first time.
L'Odyssée's main value is as a nostalgia
piece. It recognises the part that Cousteau played in popularising
underwater nature documentaries and getting marine preservation off the ground,
but about the man himself it is frustratingly vague.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After retiring from the French navy in the late 1940s, Commander Jacques-Yves
Cousteau lives an idyllic life with his wife Simone and their two sons, Jean-Michel
and Philippe, in a beautiful house overlooking the Mediterranean. Cousteau's
lifelong fascination with the sea leads him to invent a self-contained diving
suit which allows him to examine more closely the magical world beneath the
waves. From a business magnate he obtains a former minesweeper and
proceeds to adapt this into a vessel that will allow him to realise his dream.
With a ship christened the
Calypso, Commander Cousteau can begin his
exploration of the world's seas and bring its marvels into the living rooms
of millions who share his wonderment for sea-life. But as fame and
success come his way, Cousteau's family life becomes increasingly riven with
conflict and bitterness...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.