Film Review
It was in 2003, at about the time that the United States had launched
its offensive against Iraq, that actors Valérie Donzelli and
Jérémie Elkaïm embarked on their own private war -
to save the life of their eighteen-month-old son after he had been
diagnosed with cancer. In her second film, made shortly after her
debut feature
La Reine des pommes
(2009), Donzelli recounts this harrowing period of her life not, as (you
would expect) a weepy melodrama, but as the most unlikely concoction
of musical, comedy and drama - an alluring cinematic oddity that
provides the most brazenly effulgent celebration of love and
life. In a year in which French cinema exhibited an extraordinary
diversity of styles and subjects,
La
Guerre est déclarée stands out as being one of the
most original and authentic.
Valérie Donzelli and Jérémie Elkaïm not only
wrote the screenplay together (which must have been a challenging
experience, to say the least); they also play themselves in the film,
as a very modern Romeo and Juliet, along with their angelic eight-year
old son Gabriel, whose fight against cancer is at the heart of the
drama. The ordeal of making the film must have been a highly
cathartic one - why else would Donzelli and Elkaïm go through the
pain of reliving such a difficult period of their lives? - but the film
is far from being an object in self-indulgent navel gazing (as happens
all too often when inexperienced film directors attempt to tell their
own life story). By drawing heavily on what they lived through,
the terrible prospect of losing a child within two years of its birth,
Donzelli and Elkaïm deliver not only a powerful message of hope to
those who find themselves in a similar predicament, but also one of the
most vigorously life-affirming French films in years.
What makes
La Guerre est
déclarée such a potent piece of cinema is that it
takes the most delicate of subjects and approaches it in the least likely
manner, even getting us to laugh when it would be far easier for us to
shed tears. Initially, it feels like a gaudily post-modern send
up of a Jacques Demy film. A pair of highly photogenic young
people meet, fall in love and look set to live happily ever
after. Then cruel fate intervenes and the sugar-coated romance
acquires a more sickly hue, courtesy of a malignant brain tumour.
But instead of plummeting headfirst into maudlin introspection, as we might
expect, the film carries on in the same upbeat Demy-esque vein.
Yet, despite the rose-tinted idealism, retro Nouvelle Vague froth and
bizarre comic interludes, the bleaker chords can still be heard and we
never lose sight of the horrible reality of the situation, of two
anxious parents desperately willing their child to survive, against
seemingly insuperable odds.
La Guerre est déclarée
is audacious both in its choice of subject and also in the way it
tackles it. Jacques Demy is an obvious point of reference, but
the film takes just as much creative inspiration from that other great
force of the French New Wave, François Truffaut. This is
apparent not only in the use of Truffaut's familiar trademarks (irises,
voiceover and classical music) but in the way the film blithely flouts
convention - for example, using humour when you least expect it and
thereby evoking a deeper, more truthful emotional response in the
spectator. It is probably because she is telling her own
story that Donzelli has the confidence to take risks with her
mise-en-scène and forge a whole new way of cinematic
storytelling, certain in the knowledge that no matter how far she
strays from the tight furrow of convention she will never lose contact
with the emotional truth of her story and the traumas that she and her
partner have lived through. Innovative, funny and intensely
poignant,
La Guerre est
déclarée is a film that not only extends our
notion of what cinema is - an art-form whose variety and expressive
power is a long way from being exhausted - but also leaves us with the
reassuring thought that no matter how bleak life gets, there is always
a way through. If two people can go through hell, survive
and, seven years later, somehow find what it takes to make a film as
vibrant and positive as this, then anything is possible. Not all
wars end badly.
For never was a story of more hope, than this of Juliette and her
Roméo...
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
Roméo and Juliette are a young couple who are deeply in
love. As soon as they met, at a Paris fair at the start of the
21st century, they knew they were right for one another. What
could be more natural for them than to settle down together and start a
family? The birth of their first child was to be the happiest
event of their lives. But then, eighteen months later, a
bombshell lands at their feet. Young Adam has a brain tumour and
may well die before his second birthday. Roméo and
Juliette are far from resigned to the impending tragedy. They
have no intention of giving up their child, the most tangible symbol of
their love. They are determined to fight tooth and nail to save
their son. The war has just begun!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.