Film Review
Anne Novion makes an auspicious directorial debut with this bittersweet
comedy-drama that revolves around the conflict between cultures and
generations. Strongly influenced by the French New Wave director Jacques Rozier
(
Adieu Philippine,
Du côté d'Orouët),
Novion crafts a film that is both uplifting and melancholic, in which
the serene Swedish location exposes and accentuates the inner turmoil
within the main protagonists, a father and his teenage daughter, as
they both attempt to navigate a crisis point in their lives. The daughter's
burgeoning adolescence makes the father aware of his own childishness
and compels him to make a similar transition to adulthood, allowing him
to assume the responsibilities of fatherhood and rediscover meaning in
his life.
Les Grandes personnes
is a film which gently reminds us that the growing up process is not
one that ends in the wake of adolescence but is one that continues
throughout life.
Whilst Novion's assured direction has much to commend it, what
makes this a particularly charming film are the nuanced and intensely
truthful performances from its first-rate
cast, which is headed by the incomparable Jean-Pierre Darroussin, who
is perfect in the role of the father who is struggling to emerge from a
retarded adolescence. Darroussin's talent for playing seemingly naïve
characters of a sensitive nature is put to good use here and is
well-complemented by Anaïs Demoustier's wise-beyond-her-years, yet
still vulnerable, teenager, The rapport between Darroussin and
Demoustier convincingly suggests the strained tensions between a father
and his adolescent daughter and provides the basis for much of the
film's humour and melancholic introspection. With its
delicate mise-en-scène, incisive screenplay and
spellbinding performances,
Les
Grandes personnes is an engaging grown-up drama that explores the fraught
father-daughter relationship with tenderness, humour and a
pleasing smattering of irony. Anne Novion teamed up with Darroussin
for her next film, the equally beguiling
Rendez-vous à Kiruna (2013).
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
To celebrate his daughter Jeanne's 17th birthday, Albert, a divorced
librarian, takes her to the Swedish island Styrsö for their summer
holiday. Of course, he has an ulterior motive for choosing this
particular island. Equipped with the best metal detector that
money can buy, Albert sets about looking for the lost treasure of the
famous Viking Jon-Olof Vitfoen. His well-planned holiday follows
a completely different course when he gets to know Christine, a friend
of his landlady, and Jeanne begins to take an interest in the opposite sex...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.