Film Review
Director Pierre Salvadori followed up his well-received debut feature
Cible émouvante (1993)
with this amiable buddy movie featuring two prominent rising stars of French
cinema, Guillaume Depardieu and François Cluzet, with Marie Trintignant
also cropping up in a small but beautifully formed supporting role.
Depardieu and Trintignant had previously featured in Pierre Salvadori's first
film and would be reunited for his third screen offering,
Comme elle respire (1998),
so it is not unreasonable to group these first three films in the director's
oeuvre together as a loose kind of trilogy, one that offers a wry but pretty
astute commentary on contemporary life in 1990s France.
It is more than tempting to see that
Les Apprentis was for Guillaume
Depardieu what Bertrand Blier's
Les
Valseuses was for his father, Gérard Depardieu. What
both films offer is a grimly authentic and darkly comedic portrayal of a
pair of outsiders who find it impossible to engage with the false values
and attitudes of an uncaring society, and so are driven to lead a freewheeling
existence on the margins. Less blithely shocking than Blier's iconoclastic
film, and with central characters that are far more sympathetically drawn,
Les Apprentis is much easier to engage with, although it is just as
effective in communicating the failings of modern life, with its shallow
consumerist trappings and socially corrosive dog-eat-dog mentality.
Depardieu and Cluzet make a formidable casting combination, the sardonic
charms of the latter providing a perfect complement to the former's street-urchin
loutish innocence. The buddy movie is a genre that has enjoyed considerable
success both in France and America, and
Les Apprentis is one of French
cinema's more memorable attempts at this kind of film, reminding us how chalk-and-cheese
encounters can develop into friendships of the most enduring and meaningful
kind, through a shared need for trust and support in a hostile and unforgiving
world that is governed far more by greed than compassion.
Guillaume Depardieu received an early boost to his acting career by winning
the Most Promising Actor César in 1996 for his much lauded performance
in this film; his co-star Cluzet was also nominated for the Best Actor award
(but lost out to Michel Serrault for his role in
Nelly et Monsieur Arnaud).
Depardieu's subsequent acting career was somewhat compromised by recurrent
problems in his personal life (which he attributed to longstanding difficulties
with his father), before being tragically curtailed when the actor died from
pneumonia in 2008, aged 37. Just five years before this Marie Trintignant
also had her life cut short in tragic circumstance - she died after being
brutally beaten by her partner. Somehow the sorry world that
Les Apprentis
presented us with in 1995 now appears absurdly tame in comparison with the
one we actually inhabit.
© James Travers 1999
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Pierre Salvadori film:
...Comme elle respire (1998)
Film Synopsis
Antoine Parent is an aspiring writer who suffers from depression and a chronic
inability to make money from his art. He lives in Paris and shares
a modest apartment with his good-for-nothing friend Fred Rouyer, who appears
to be more than content with his life as an inveterate loser. The two
men, both in their early twenties, have difficulty making ends meet and,
with little chance of improving their financial situation, it looks as if
they will soon be without a place to live. They agree to set about
raising the deposit for a new abode, and this they intend to achieve by breaking
into the safe of Antonie's newspaper employers. What starts out as
a well-laid plan rapidly spirals out of control, and the two men discover
that the only thing in this world they can count on is their friendship...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.