Film Review
Louis Garrel looks set to follow in his father's footsteps if his
dazzling first feature as a director is anything to go by. Having
cut his directing teeth with three short films, one of which won the
Jean Vigo prix du court métrage in 2012, Garrel Junior shares
his father Philippe's interest in keeping alive the spirit of the
French New Wave, generously referencing the films of François
Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard as he serves up a tasty mélange of
triangular melodrama and piquant comedy, all with a very contemporary
feel.
Les Deux amis
combines the wistful melancholia of
Jules
et Jim (1962) with the playful exuberance of
Une femme est une femme (1961),
and what starts out looking like yet another three-way romance acquires
more substance when it develops into a perceptive and rather poignant
exploration of male friendship.
Les Deux amis is an updated
version of Alfred de Musset's well-known stage play
Les Caprices de Marianne, which as
every French film buff knows was the original inspiration for Jean
Renoir's
La Règle du jeu (1939).
Garrel shared the scripting duties with the acclaimed writer-director
Christophe Honoré, who gave him one of his first important
acting jobs, in
Ma mère (2004), and
subsequently cast him in several other films, including
Les Chansons d'Amour
(2007). With Garrel being a highly thought of actor, it is
natural that he should star in the film, alongside his real-life friend
Vincent Macaigne - the two had worked together recently on Philippe
Garrel's
Un été brûlant
(2011). The talented and hugely charismatic Iranian actress
Golshifteh Farahani was honoured with the part of the femme fatale,
completing a trio of remarkable performers who had already had fun with
the love triangle concept in Garrel's short film
La Règle de trois (2011).
More than anything, it is the performances that make
Les Deux amis such an engaging and
rewarding film, with Garrel managing to pitch it somewhere between his
father's more contemplative dramas and Honoré's livelier
reflections on love, life and friendship. Alongside his father's
films, Louis Garrel's first feature looks pretty slight but it has
greater crowd-pulling potential and offers more laughs than Philippe
Garrel's entire oeuvre. Admittedly, the film's authors don't
always strike the right balance between comedy and drama, and some of
the more juvenile humorous interludes feel like a careless distraction
from the deeper truths that the film is groping towards. A scene
in which the main characters find themselves on a film set re-enacting
the May 1968 riots looks like a gratuitous homage to Garrel Senior's
Les Amants réguliers
(2005), in which son Louis starred. Welcome as her presence is,
Farahani is almost surplus to plot requirements and receives more
screen time than she deserves given that the core of the film is
concerned with the relationship between its two male leads.
The chemistry between Garrel, as ever the self-confident but likeable
poseur, and Macaigne, the perpetual nervy neurotic, is so intense and
true-to-life that they could easily have carried the film by
themselves. Their two-hander scenes are the ones that
particularly stand out, funny and touching in equal measure.
Friendship is a subject that is clearly dear to Garrel's heart as it
features prominently in all of his films to date. In
Les Deux amis, the fledgling
director shows that he is aware of what a wonderful and fragile thing
friendship can be, more complex, more mysterious and perhaps ultimately
more tragic than romantic love, and yet this is something which has
been dealt with far less assiduously by cinema.
Les Deux amis opens a door to whole
new vistas around the under-exploited concept of bromance to which
Louis Garrel seems to be particularly well attuned, and which may well
become the cornerstone of his art. Philippe Garrel is a hard act
to follow, but his son Louis's first serious directorial bash is
replete with promise. As someone once said, I think this is the
beginning of a beautiful friendship.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Louis Garrel film:
Petit tailleur (2010)