Film Review
After the phenomenal success of their earlier hit comedy
Delicatessen (1991),
the directing team comprising Marc Caro and Jean-Pierre Jeunet return to their
nightmarish post-apocalyptic dream world with a film that has an equal visual impact
but is nowhere near as funny.
From the very first scene, we are treated to some absolutely stunning special effects
wizardry which gives the film its unique atmosphere and momentum.
The story, at its core, is nothing more than a child's fairy tale. Some wicked
monster kidnaps children and a brave hero comes to their rescue. However, Caro and
Jeunet's approach is to take this familiar theme and add to it some magnificently original
characters and to set it in a grim futuristic landscape, made tantalisingly real by the
quality of the special effects.
Those who enjoyed Dominique Pinon's performance as the lodger in
Delicatessen will
not be disappointed. He appears in this film in no less than seven roles - often,
again through some clever electronic trickery - simultaneously on screen.
Pinon's chimpanzee-like leathery face is one of the film's most memorable motifs - and
the scenes where the various Pinon clones start fighting amongst themselves is both supremely
odd and utterly hilarious.
However, in this film, the best drawn characters are probably the little girl Miette and
her protector, One. The two have a genuine on-screen rapport which makes their story
moving without ever slipping into sentimentality.
On the subject of child acting, this film boasts some of the most effective use of young
child actors ever. The only other French film to use child actors so well is probably
Jean Vigo's 1933 film,
Zéro de conduite (1933).
This is a film well worth seeing, although, as in
Delicatessen, the special effects
tend often to distract from the storyline and weaken the characterisation.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marc Caro film:
Delicatessen (1991)
Film Synopsis
On an isolated disused sea rig live the remnants of a mad scientist's experiments into
creating alternative life forms. These include Irvin, a brain in a fish tank, six
identical clones of the inventor himself, and Krank, a Frankensteinesque monster who ages
prematurely because he cannot dream. To arrest his aging, Krank kidnaps children
from the nearby harbour town and tries to tap their dreams - in vain, because their dreams
always turn into nightmares. When his young companion is kidnapped, a circus strongman,
One, sets out to find him, with a young girl named Miette. They have to fend off
murderous hoards of android cyclops, the evil Octopus twins, and a homicidal flea, before
they even get near Krank's sea rig. Then their problems really begin...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.