Film Review
With his first two features, the lurid horror flick
Sheitan (2006) and grim prison
drama
Dog Pound (2010),
director Kim Chapiron earned his spurs as the new bad boy of French
cinema. His third film, a saucy exposé of the naughty
goings on within the hallowed walls of France's top business school, could
have been his most provocative yet, but somehow Chapiron's capacity to
shock and surprise seems to have waned, so what we get is a film with a
massive crisis of identity, an ungainly mix of teen movie, crime drama
and awkwardly sentimental dramedy.
La Crème de la crème
is far from being a complete write-off but lacking a well-structured
narrative and credible characters, it falls way short of your
expectations and, in common with its director's previous two films,
ends up being a somewhat half-hearted and gauche attempt to unpick the
psyche of today's youth.
Chapiron's portrayal of what has become popularly known as 'Generation
Y' (the post-post babyboomers) is far from flattering - sexually
precocious narcissists who, despite having a full mastery of sexual
technique (thanks to the internet and late-night TV shows) appear
completely retarded when it comes to forming meaningful
relationships. The privileged elite that feature in
La Crème de la crème
represent perhaps the least sympathetic stratum of society Chapiron
could have focused his critical gaze on, and the main challenge that he
and his co-screenwriter Noé Debré faced was making their
ensemble of egoistical 'Hooray Henry' protagonists human, let alone
sympathetic. Despite their best efforts, and despite some very
commendable work on the acting front (Alice Isaaz, Jean-Baptiste
Lafarge and Thomas Blumenthal are undeniably excellent - all three are
names to watch out for), the characters still fail to be convincing.
The comicbook characterisation and lack of a coherent narrative are
only two of the script's flaws. Another is its attempt to pass off
borrowed ideas or tired old platitudes as stonkingly original
observations when they are anything but. Glibly reeled out
phrases like 'everything is for sale' or 'the laws of the market apply
to love' would have been less wearisome if they had been meant in a
more ironic vein, but, alas, irony does not appear to be Chapiron's
strongest suit. For a film that promotes itself as something
along the lines of an unfettered libertine romp it ends up following a
depressingly familiar Gallic rom-com trajectory, ending up in a deluge
of sentiment that is slightly harder to stomach than the film's
occasional flirtations with full-on erotica.
La Crème de la crème
deserves some credit for at least trying to engage with a generation
which most of us old fogies (i.e. anyone over the age of 30) find hard
to comprehend but, lacking the courage of its convictions, as well as
any real insight, it fails to avoid being the cinematic equivalent of
an
éjaculation précoce
(if you'll pardon the French) - a decent build-up that promises a Hell
of a lot but only ends in soggy disappointment.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Dan, Kelliah and Louis are three students at one of France's most
important business schools. These young people are being moulded
into the elite of tomorrow and are ready to put what they have learned
into practice. When they realise that market forces apply to
relations between boys and girls the three friends set out to transform
their campus into a place of study and experimentation. The cream
of French youth has fun taking advantage of its privileged
position, selling sex for profit. Everything, it seems, can be bought and sold - but to
what extent..?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.