Film Review
Director Claude Pinoteau followed up his stylish thriller
Le
Silencieux (1973) with this amiable but somewhat shallow
portrayal of the problematic relationship between a teenage daughter
and her middle-aged father. The film presages Pinoteau's
subsequent (more convincing) coming-of-age comedy-drama
La Boum
(1980), and was a notable box office hit, achieving an audience of just
under four million in France. Isabelle Adjani is remarkable in
her first major screen role, her portrayal of a rebellious adolescent
beautifully complemented by Lino Ventura, who plays the father who is
reluctant to let his daughter go. This is an atypical role for
Ventura, who is more strongly associated with tough gangster and cop
roles in gritty policier films such as
Le Deuxième souffle (1966)
and
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969).
Ventura's sensitive and subtly moving performance brings an authenticity to
La Gifle which is less evident in the
in the script, and which Pinoteau occasionally undermines with some
heavy-handed direction.
Pinoteau's shortcomings as a director are pretty well negated by the
quality of the performances. As well as a few established actors
(Annie Girardot, Georges Wilson and Nicole Courcel) the supporting cast
includes several highly talented young actors at the start of their
careers, many of whom (Michel Aumont, Nathalie Baye, Richard Berry and
André Dussollier) would go on to be major players in French
cinema. Improbably cast as Annie Girardot's love interest is the
well-known British character actor Robert Hardy, just a few years
before he found fame as Siegfried Farnon in the long-running BBC
television series
All Creatures
Great and Small. Hardy (who had previously worked with
Pinoteau and Ventura on
Le Silencieux)
evokes perfectly the French idea of English charm and eccentricity -
his strained confrontation with Ventura (who evokes perfectly
the English idea of French surliness) is the most memorable
thing about this film.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2010
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Next Claude Pinoteau film:
Le Grand escogriffe (1976)
Film Synopsis
Jean Doulean is a 50-something geography teacher who lives in Paris with
his 18-year-old daughter Isabelle. It has been several years since
Jean's wife Hélène left him and settled in England with her
new partner. Not one to let this desertion get to him, Jean was soon
pursuing a relationship with another woman, Madeleine, but this soon came
to an end and he was left to pick up the pieces after being abandoned a second
time. Jean's professional life then became as fraught as his love life
when he got into a fracas with the police and now he faces the prospect of
having to move to another school.
Despite all this private turmoil, Jean does his best to be a good father
to his teenage daughter, not knowing that she plans to give up her studies
in medicine so that she can live with her boyfriend, Marc. When this
is revealed to him, Jean is so shocked that he slaps his daughter on the
face. This is one betrayal he cannot accept, but by hitting his precious
Isabelle all he succeeds in doing is hastening her departure from his life.
Such is the girl's disgust for her father that she wastes no time leaving
him so that she can join her mother across the channel...
© James Travers
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