Film Review
With her fourth feature, actress-turned-director Emmanuelle Bercot
casts a critical eye over the French state's ability to reform
persistent juvenile delinquents and concludes, somewhat like Pangloss
in Voltaire's
Candide, that
"all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds". It
doesn't need a filmmaker to point out that juvenile delinquency is one
of the most serious social problems France (indeed most countries in
the developed West) has to deal with, but rather than ring out yet
another counsel of despair, Bercot accentuates the positive and shows
that there is hope, that France's criminal justice and social support
systems have enough compassion and commitment to save at least some of
the feral adolescents that come their way.
La Tête haute is a
worthy film but its noble intentions are somewhat undermined by its
preachy tone and a gradual drift towards forced sentimentality in its
second half. Bercot appears more concerned with turning out a
feel good crowdpleaser than offering an honest appraisal of how things
really are and her film ends up feeling more like soft soap than hard
social realism, although it does have a gritty edge to it and certainly
does not downplay the difficulties involved in reforming naturally
aggressive teenagers. The Dardenne brothers'
Le Fils
(2002) is a more challenging viewing proposition, but it has a depth
and brutal authenticity which Bercot's film patently lacks.
What redeems the film and makes it a compelling piece of drama are the
astonishingly true-to-life performances from the three lead actors, who
include two established stars of French cinema who need absolutely no
introduction (Catherine Deneuve and Benoit Magimel) and an exciting
newcomer, Rod Paradot, an 18-year-old carpentry apprentice 'discovered'
by casting director Elsa Pharaon at a technical college in Paris.
Despite having no prior acting experience (or maybe
because he has no such experience),
Paradot brings a dangerous raw vitality to the film that makes it
entirely his own, much as James Dean did with
Rebel Without a Cause
(1955). It's not a particularly deep or nuanced performance but
it positively seethes with truth, to the extent that Paradot compels us
to identify not only with his character Malony, but with the reviled
stratum of society he represents, adolescents trapped in a never-ending
cycle of self-loathing, violence and censure.
As the juvenile judge in charge of Malony's reform and rehabilitation,
Deneuve tempers her uncompromising toughness with compassion,
effectively symbolising the humane but rigorous system that the French
state has developed over many years to deal with juvenile
delinquents. Benoit Magimel's character Yann represents one of
the dedicated workers on the front line, and the fact that he was
himself a problem teenager offers hope that one day Malony may be a
reformed character. There is a great deal in the film that
doesn't quite work - Sara Forestier's 'bad mother' is no more than a
facile caricature, and the amorous interlude which assists Paradot's
process of maturity feels jarringly incongruous, directing the film
down a sentimental cul-de-sac from which it never fully recovers.
The one thing that
does work,
and in doing so pretty well makes up for all of the film's other
shortcomings, is the moving relationship that slowly develops between
Paradot and Magimel. The educator's concern for the seemingly
untameable Malony is genuine and you can almost feel this working its
way into the younger man's consciousness, beginning the slow and
painful process of reform that may one day make Malony a model
citizen.
La Tête haute plays
the sentimentality card too glibly to be entirely satisfying but its
heart is in the right place and there are enough moments of truth to
make up for the sorry lapses into soapy contrivance. In any
event, the film's generally upbeat tone leaves us with the encouraging
thought that whilst dealing with juvenile delinquency remains an
on-going battle, the war is far from lost.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Emmanuelle Bercot film:
La Fille de Brest (2016)
Film Synopsis
Unable to cope with her troublesome six-year-old son Malony, single
mother Séverine places him in the care of a juvenile court
judge, Florence Blaque. Malony is now the French state's problem
and over the next ten years he grows into an aggressive and unstable
teenager as he moves from one institution to another. Malony
appears incapable of reform and it seems certain that he will end up a
perpetual criminal and social outsider. In a rehab centre, a man
experienced in dealing with cases such as this takes Malony under his
wing and does his best to make him a reformed character. Despite
the encouragement he gets from his teachers and social workers, Malony
is still unable to control his urge to rebel. It seems that
nothing will prevent him from going to prison...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.