Film Review
"Are we there yet?" It's a refrain known to every parent who has
ever undertaken a car journey longer than about ten minutes with a
hyperactive nipper in the back. The self-same refrain is one that
you can hardly avoid intoning (at roughly the same frequency as the
aforementioned pain in the back seat) whilst watching
La Tendresse, a road movie for
cultured masochists proffered by Belgian's pre-eminent female film
producer and director Marion Hänsel. Hänsel's
reputation hangs mainly on her 1987 feature
Les Noces barbares (1987), a
starkly realistic account of the breakdown in the relationship between
a mother and son. Since, she has garnered critical acclaim
with such films as
Between the Devil
and the Deep Blue Sea (1995) and
Si le vent soulève les sables
(2006), although some of her more experimental offerings - such as
Noir
Océan (2010) - have struggled to find favour with
critics and audiences.
La Tendresse is another
attempt by Hänsel to push the boundaries of cinematic expression,
neglecting as she does so the good will and patience of her
audience. It is essentially a mix of rom-com and road movie with
next to nothing in the way of a plot, just a series of banal, slightly
humorous incidents that befall a long divorced couple as they come to
the aid of their grown-up son after a skiing accident. Marilyne
Canto and Olivier Gourmet make such a likeable and convincing pair of
leads that for a while you hardly notice the absence of plot. The
film just coasts along amiably, its stack of true-to-life trivialities
making an anaemic but tolerable substitute for a narrative. The
most exciting thing that happens is Canto managing to get herself
locked in a public lavatory. It's both the dramatic and comedic
highpoint of the film, so savour it whilst it lasts.
The film's one redeeming feature is its total rejection of
cliché (which is no doubt a by-product of Hänsel's
over-zealous rejection of the classical dramatic form). If this
were a run-of-the-mill American rom-com, the two main characters, a
divorced couple, would rekindle their erstwhile romance and end up
getting together again before the credits roll. Hänsel is
wise enough to know that life is nothing like an American rom-com, and
so in her far more down to Earth film we know right from the outset
that there is no chance the ex-husband and ex-wife will become an item
again. They have moved on and whatever divine force it was that
first brought them together has long since dissipated. With the
romantic angle hastily disposed of, Hänsel is free to explore a
more nuanced kind of relationship between a man and a woman who once
were in love but no longer feel that kind of attraction. In the
course of their mundane trip from Belgium to the French Alps, they
discover new feelings, of tenderness and mutual understanding, tempered
but not soiled by the pain of their separation fifteen years previously.
The problem is that, in her striving for 'sur le vif' realism,
Hänsel ends up understating everything to the extent that her film
becomes just a bland accumulation of tedious banalities. It's odd
that, for a supposed road movie, the film doesn't seem to go
anywhere. The two main characters become aware of their mutual
fondness for one another, and this impacts slightly on how they treat
others, but they can hardly be said to have been altered by the
experience of their enforced reunion. The film opens with a
stunning aerial shot in the French Alps, with two barely perceptible
specks slowly making their way across a vast expanse of ethereal
whiteness. These 'specks' are revealed to be skiers, one of whom
is about to have the accident that will precipitate the 'events'
of the film. It's a fitting visual metaphor for what ensues -
microscopic activity in a vast landscape of sheer nothingness.
La Tendresse is an agreeably
aimless ramble that takes in some pleasant scenery and some interesting
peripheral characters (cheer when Sergi López shows up
unexpectedly - alas, the most exciting thing he does is turn on a car
radio). The film deserves credit for the finesse with which it
handles the brittle relationships of a divorced couple and their
son. Regrettably, its lack of narrative thrust and anything
resembling a payoff makes it something of an endurance test,
particularly for those old-fashioned folk who like their films not be
entirely plot-free. With a less charming and capable duo than
Olivier Gourmet and Marilyne Canto to keep it on the road, this latest
off-piste venture from Marion Hänsel would have been a soulless
trek into the wilderness.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Having been separated for fifteen years, Frans and Lisa make the
journey to another country together so that they can collect their son,
who has been hospitalised after a serious skiing accident. What
do they still feel for one another: indifference, resentment or
jealousy? Or maybe there is still some glimmering of friendship,
perhaps even love..?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.