Film Review
Jaco Van Dormael has had a hard time following his first two cinematic
successes:
Toto le héros (1991) and
Le Huitième jour (1996),
two wildly inventive films that established him as one of the Belgium
film industry's most promising talents at a time when it was
experiencing a sudden and dramatic renaissance. More than a
decade elapsed before he made his third film, the extravagant sci-fi
spectacular
Mr Nobody (2009), but this
proved to be a massive flop and might well have put the kibosh on any
future filmmaking aspirations. But then, after staging his live
dance and cinema crossover
Kiss
& Cry (2011), Van Dormael returns with his zaniest film
yet, a totally unhinged religious satire that almost makes the Pythons'
Life
of Brian (1979) appear a tad reverential in its mockery of
all things Christian.
Le Tout Nouveau Testament
(a.k.a.
The Brand New Testament)
is so caught up in its exuberant comicbook absurdity that it is
unlikely to offend anyone other than the most hard-line of Christian
fundamentalists, so any religious backlash (of the kind that
accompanied the release of the Pythons' film) is unlikely. Things
have clearly moved on since those bad old days when a person risked
being roasted alive or dismembered in public for subscribing to the
'wrong version' of Christianity. Imagine the fate that would have
fallen Van Dormael in an earlier century if he had dared to portray the
Garden of Eden as Brussels city centre inhabited by all manner of
exotic fauna, with the Almighty shown to be a sadistic bully happily
engaged in sowing universal disharmony with the help of his clapped-out
laptop computer.
You can't imagine any filmmaker being brave enough to give Islam this
kind of lunatic ribbing, and there's a certain irony, if not poignancy,
in the fact that his film was released in the very same year as the
terrorist attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo, which was prompted by
the weekly paper's publication of satirical cartoons of the prophet
Muhammad. With so much cruelty and injustice in the world, it's
hard not think of
God as the kind of cruel puppetmaster that Van Dormael imagines him as
being - and this is perhaps what the film is really mocking, our childish
need to blame it all on someone, rather than an attack on Christianity
as such. The director is unlikely to get a Fatwa for his
God-bashing flight of fancy, but if he gets struck down by lightning in
the next twelve months we'll probably know the reason why.
Le Tout Nouveau Testament's
first half chugs along amiably enough as it lurches into the
philosophical conundrum of how knowing the precise time of our
expiration will affect how we live our lives. Those with years to
spare will inevitably lead more reckless lives - witness one character
repeating one suicidal stunt after another, confident in the knowledge
that he is incapable of killing himself - whilst those nearer to
death's door hastily reappraise their priorities to get as much as they
can out of the time that remains. Van Dormael's fertile
imagination allows him to extract a great deal of comedy mileage from
this single premise, but ultimately the ideas run out and for the
film's second half he goes chasing after another comedy hare, alas one
which doesn't deliver half as many laughs.
Pursued by her suitably miffed father (who art in a dreary Belgian
squat rather than that other place with pearly gates), the Almighty's
troublesome daughter sets about aping her long-lost older bro by
gathering a new set of apostles. Following her debut in the
Dardenne brothers'
Deux jours, une nuit (2014),
Pili Groyne looks every inch a future star of French cinema as she zips
through the film looking like a slightly younger version of
Amélie
Poulain and Louis Malle's hyperactive
Zazie. The weird ensemble
that the mischievous pre-teen brings together include a serial killer
with a soft centre (François Damiens), a little boy resolved to
change his sex, a woman who lost her hand in an accident, and a late
middle-aged looker who falls head over heels in love with a gorilla
(not the first big hairy ape that Catherine Deneuve has had to share a
bed with on screen). Allusions to earlier films - notably Nagisa
Ôshima's
Max Mon Amour (1986) and Alain
Berliner's
Ma vie en rose (1997) - fall
thick and fast as Van Dormael exhausts his own ideas bank and starts
raiding other people's, but whilst the humour flags towards the end,
the director's infectious sense of fun just about stays the course,
helped by some colourful performances from a predominantly Belgian
crowd (Deneuve being the one non-Belgian). The only letdown is
that the wonderful Yolande Moreau (who plays Mrs God) gets so little to
do - probably because her character features so little in the official
Biblical text.
It was another off-the-wall Belgian comedy -
C'est arrivé près de chez
vous (1992) - that launched Benoît Poelvoorde's screen
career, and since then the actor has made a career playing wacky
misfits and losers of varying degrees of weirdness, so who better than
him to take on Van Dormael's conception of a slobby and spiteful God? -
the kind of all-powerful deity who can't be bothered to change out of
his pyjamas and spends all day beating up the wife and kiddie whilst
dreaming up ways to make mankind's lot more miserable than it is
already. Of course, the downside is that after playing the most
powerful being in creation (Donald Trump excepted), Poelvoorde's
subsequent career can only be a downer, but who could throw up the
opportunity to portray God as a malicious boor whose imaginative
faculties are mostly preoccupied with dreaming up variations on
Murphy's Law? It's a heaven-sent gift of a part for Belgium's
most dependably funny actor and he doesn't disappoint. If
Poelvoorde gets struck down by lightning in the next twelve months,
we'll probably know the reason why. Let's hope The Big Guy has a
sense of humour.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jaco Van Dormael film:
Toto le héros (1991)
Film Synopsis
The good news is that God exists. The bad news is that He lives
in Brussels and is a complete and utter bastard. Not content with
making life Hell for his wife and ten-year-old daughter Ea, He spends
his days inflicting as much misery as He can on the humans he created
for his own amusement. The pleasure the Almighty gets from
slaughtering his creations in grandiose catastrophes is surpassed only
by his love of inventing new laws that drive them to distraction, laws
such as the one that insists a human's phone will always ring as soon
as he gets into a bath. Far from being in awe of her father's
malevolence, Ea is disgusted by it and decides to get her own back by
hacking into his computer and sending a text message to everyone on
Earth revealing the exact date of his or her death. Taking the
advice of her older brother Jesus, who has long given up on God, Ea
then finds a way to Earth and starts recruiting six more
apostles. Never a good example on the anger management front, God
is livid when He discovers His daughter's treachery and has no option
but to go after her. He has, after all, a reputation to live up
to...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.