Film Review
In his previous two films (
Tout le monde n'a pas la
chance d'avoir des parents communistes and
L'homme est une femme comme les autres),
director Jean-Jacques Zilbermann has shown a flair for tackling social realist themes
with genuine interest and a wry sense of humour. He continues this trend with hid
third film,
Les Fautes d'orthographe, a semi-autobiographical
account of his uncomfortable years in a French boarding school.
Although the film is generally well-scripted and well-acted, there is the impression
that Zilbermann is playing with too many ideas, trying to cram too much into too small
a space. Indeed, this feels rather like two films badly spliced together.
The first half is a latter day version of
Tom Brown's
Schooldays, in which the pampered adolescent Daniel undergoes all manner of psychological
angst as he finds himself rejected by his peers and his parents whilst coping with the
trauma of his first sexual experiences. Whilst Zilbermann is by no means the first
filmmaker to tackle these themes, he does so with great sensitivity and insight, and paints
a picture of life in a boarding school that is gruellingly tough and unsentimental, vaguely
reminiscent of Ken Loach's 1969 masterpiece
Kes.
In its second half, the film becomes a slightly laboured allegory of the May 1968
uprising, with Daniel single-handedly engineering a rebellion against his parents' tyrannous
regime. Although it's all pretty well-realised, it just doesn't quite ring true,
and the realism that Zilbermann is striving for is frequently undermined by over-dramatization
and some unconvincing characterisation. That the director manages to get away with
these faults is down largely to the contributions from his excellent cast. In particular,
Carole Bouquet and Olivier Gourmet make their thinly drawn, somewhat caricatured, characters
plausible and interesting, whilst Damien Jouillerot's portrayal of the angst-ridden Daniel
is striking in its maturity and acute sense of realism.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Jean-Jacques Zilbermann film:
Tout le monde n'a pas eu la chance d'avoir des parents communistes (1993)
Film Synopsis
France, 1967. Aged 15, Daniel Massu decides that he should be treated like any other
boy at the boarding school run by his parents. However, life in a shared dormitory
proves to be harder than he imagined. Bullied by his classmates, he begins to resent
his parents' coolness towards him. Things come to a head when one of the few friends
he makes is expelled from the school. Daniel contrives a scheme to get even with
his tyrannical father…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.