Film Review
After his dark take on a familiar fairytale,
Le Petit Poucet (2001),
director Olivier Dahan takes us on another, even weirder, fantasy excursion,
a distinctly warped variation on that ever-popular cinematic genre - the
road movie.
La Vie promise is a gutsily self-conscious oddity
of a film that slips capriciously between hard-edge realism and dreamlike
visual ballad without ever managing to crystallise into a satisfying whole.
It's more of the same kind of debauched semi-brilliant, semi-offputting genre-hopping
potpourri that seems to have become the defining aspect of Dahan's distinctive
but not entirely convincing brand of auteur cinema.
Dahan's flirtations with mainstream cinema - his biopics
La Môme (2007) and
Grace of
Monacco (2014), and action-thriller
Les
Rivières pourpres 2 (2004) - may appear sickeningly populist
but they tend to have much more in the way of artistic self-discipline and
material substance than his more daring but generally woollier auteur pieces.
La Vie promise suffers from its director's prone for stylistic excess
and seeming inability to construct a coherent narrative. The characters
are, typical of Dahan, superficially drawn and painful prone to cliché;
the wobbly storyline doubly so. Instead of genuine emotion, the film
resorts to cheap pathos of the most lamentable kind and struggles to engage
with its audience in any meaningful way.
Dahan's contribution to the film is one of abject failure, but the same cannot
be said of its lead actress, Isabelle Huppert, who has an unerring gift for
salvaging just about any film - no matter how dire - she happens to get herself
into. Huppert is one of those few actors who scarcely needs a script
to turn in a stunning performance, which is just as well for directors like
Dahan for whom screenwriting is a painful chore he'd rather overlook (at
least, that is how it seems to me). Transformed virtually beyond recognition
by a remarkable make-up job, Huppert does everything she can to alienate
the spectator from her, but as unsympathetic and vacuous as her character
is, she still remains the emotional core of the film, the one thing that
keeps us involved.
Supporting artistes Pascal Greggory and Maud Forget put in some great work
also, but it is the leading lady that monopolises our attention and carries
us through this excruciating artless wonder. Once again, Huppert takes
us by surprise with another bewildering exhibition of female perversion -
a mother who loathes her daughter, an inwardly fragile hooker who cannot
help being drawn to brutes who are patently no good for her.
La
Vie promise would have been an unbearable car crash of a film without
the presence of this unique acting talent, but even with Huppert's totally enthralling
performance it still leaves you wishing you had done some something else with
your time.
© James Travers 2019
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Next Olivier Dahan film:
Les Rivières pourpres II - Les anges de l'apocalypse (2004)
Film Synopsis
Sylvia is a forty-something prostitute who makes a reasonable living for
herself, picking up clients on the streets of Nice. She has no time
for her grown-up daughter Laurence, with whom she has never been particularly
close. One night, as her mother is being violently assaulted,
Laurence is driven to kill a man. In the grip of panic, the two women
suddenly take flight and set off on a desperate quest to find Sylvia's first
husband, with whom she had a son. On the way, they encounter a man
named Joshua who is on bail and has no intention of being sent back to prison.
Sylvia and Laurence fall out again and go their separate ways...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.