Le P'tit curieux makes a worthy attempt to show us how differently
children see the world compared with adults but a third-rate script and
some generally uninspired direction from Jean Marboeuf pretty well
puts the kibosh on what initially promises to be an innovative film
about childhood.
Beset with a wishy-washy narrative that meanders
all over the place and characters that are so thinly sketched they
are almost invisible to the naked eye, the film quickly loses its charm
and soon becomes a chore to sit through. Marboeuf appears
singularly unenthused by the film - his direction shows a clinical
detachment and lack of involvement with the subject matter that
is an instant turn off. This is surprising as he directed a number
of interesting films (albeit most were for television) including
an informative biopic on the disgraced head of state Maréchal Philippe Pétain.
The film does however have one saving grace, in the form of Milan
Argaud, the engaging boy actor who, in his first screen role, impresses
as the central character Clément. It is with astonishing
skill that he takes the focus away from the more experienced
cast members (Jean-Claude Dreyfus, Alain Bashung, Andréa Ferréol),
who appear frankly bored with the whole proceeding.
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Film Synopsis
Clément is a nine-year-old boy with an insatiable curiosity for the
world around him. There are so many things that puzzle him - for instance,
why do his mother and father live apart? - but adults are so reluctant to
explain things to him. To find the answers he seeks, he sets out with
his digital camera to conduct his own investigation, surreptitiously taking
photographs which he later posts on the internet. As he scours the
peaceful provincial town where he lives, he finds he has no shortage of interesting
subjects, whose behaviour makes no sense to him. Adults appear to be
even stranger than he had supposed, especially when they think they are unobserved.
Clément is more grown-up than he looks. He has his own girlfriend,
Astrid, whom he loves madly and intends spending the rest of his life with.
One fateful day, the little boy comes across the dead body of a young woman,
the victim of a savage assault. This killing is followed by another
and then another, and it seems to the police that a deranged serial killer
is at large. Seeing himself as a detective, Clément sets out
to find the murderer before he strikes again...
American film comedy had its heyday in the 1920s and '30s, but it remains an important genre and has given American cinema some of its enduring classics.