Film Review
If Woody Allen were to attempt an adaptation of Ferenc Molnár's famous
stage play
Liliom (better known
as its musical reincarnation
Carousel)
it would probably look something like this quirky Belgian comedy (after it
had been dubbed into French). Director Vincent Lannoo freely admits
to taking a cue or two from the esteemed Mr Allen and his film, a typically
Allenesque meditation on love and death, is as likeably idiosyncratic
and unpredictable as anything produced by his better known American counterpart.
Les Âmes de papier takes a situation that is one of the bulwarks
of francophone cinema, the love triangle, and gives it an amusing spin by
having as one of its protagonists a man brought back from the dead.
The other two protagonists - a world weary scribe and still grieving partner
- buy into this fantastic premise with surprising ease (the most obvious
flaw in an admittedly so-so script) but Lannoo's matter-of-fact approach
(something he perfected on his 2010 faux documentary
Vampires) helps
us over the credibility hurdle - with the help of some quintessentially Belgian
dark humour. Whatever shortcomings the script may have are more than
made up for by the enjoyable, true-to-life contributions from the three principal
actors. With his penchant for downbeat humour and general air of a
man who has had more than his fill of the slings and arrows of outrageous
fortune, Stéphane Guillon could easily pass muster as a French equivalent
of Woody Allen - the role of the moody writer brought back to life by a love
affair was clearly written for him in mind and he excels in the part.
Likewise Jonathan Zaccaï (a far better actor than he is given credit
for) was an easy shoe-in for the part of the atomised reporter who somehow
returns to Earth (we never discover how) so that he can bid a fond farewell
to his nearest and dearest, the most brazen filch from Molnár's play.
Completing the unlikely lead trio is a captivating (as ever) Julie Gayet
- oddly, she is the most ethereal of the three leads and the one who
most makes us aware that this is more in the way of a fairytale than a real-life
drama. If Gayet were taken out of the equation this would have looked
like the wierdest of buddy movies, with Guillon going to extraordinary
lengths to convince Zaccaï he is dead and Zaccaï stubbornly
refusing to accept the fact. It sounds like the premise for a great
sitcom.
Pierre Richard's inclusion as a cantankerous old Holocaust survivor preoccupied
with his memoirs looks like an afterthought, although the actor more than
justifies his presence by deftly fielding some anarchic humour in the muddled proceedings.
Having viciously assaulted a street Santa, Richard happily causes pandemonium
in a supermarket - something that only a sprightly Jewish septuagenarian can get
away with.
Les Âmes de papier does disgrace itself a little
with its clumsily doled out sentimentality and a general lack of cohesion, but its tongue-in-cheek reworking of a familiar
plot and a generous helping of off-kilter humour make it a surprisingly fun
little film.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Since his wife's premature death, Paul has little enthusiasm for his career
as a writer and he now devotes himself mostly to writing funeral speeches
for paying customers. This is how he comes to meet Emma, an attractive
young woman who lost her own partner Nathan, a war reporter, a year ago.
Emma commissions Paul to write a piece about her husband for her young son
Adam, but before he has completed this assignment Paul realises he is hopelessly
in love with his client. A blossoming love affair is abruptly derailed
when, one evening, a stranger comes knocking on the door to Paul's apartment.
The middle-aged writer is aghast when he recognises the stranger as Emma's
supposedly deceased husband. It seems that Nathan has returned from
the dead. On the plus side, he has completely lost his memory...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.