Film Review
You're never too old to have a good time - that's the moral of this
diverting little comedy which first-time director Pascal Rabaté
adapted from his popular comic book. At a time when cinema has
never been so youth-orientated and when everyone seems to be obsessed
with looking young,
Les Petits
ruisseaux feels like a breath of fresh air, reassuring us that
being old and having fun are not mutually exclusive.
Much of the film's charm lies in the way it downplays its somewhat
subversive concept (namely that an a septuagenarian can enjoy a healthy
love life) by adopting a style that is more in keeping with the
conventional view of old age (i.e. such as we would find in a typical
Jean Becker film). You can easily imagine a version of this film
which had a much more punchy presentation, in which the principal
characters behaved like drug-crazed geriatric teddy boys. Wisely,
Rabaté did not go down this more truculent path and instead
delivers a gentler film in which the characters are not ridiculous
caricatures but recognisable senior inhabitants of our own world, albeit
ones who prefer a night of passion to one that revolves
around a mug of Horlicks and a Jilly Cooper novel.
Daniel Prévost is superb as the main protagonist, the solitary
old widower who rejuvenates before our eyes as he rediscovers his taste
for life and his love for the pleasures of the flesh. It is a wonderfully humane
and nuanced performance which takes what appears, on the face of it, to
be an outré premise and makes it real and rather endearing. Just why shouldn't a
70-year-old live like a reckless adolescent? Just why shouldn't
he extract as much happiness from his last few precious drops of
life? What are we here for if not to enjoy ourselves?
Les Petits ruisseaux is likely
to be controversial, since it boldly challenges us to confront our
prejudices about old age and accept that the young do not own the
exclusive rights to hedonism. Yet its characters are portrayed so
sympathetically that anyone who watches it cannot fail to be bowled
over by its charm and humanity. After all, life doesn't end when
you stop working.
Au contraire...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After the death of his wife, Emile now leads a peaceful file in contented
retirement. He is happy to let the days slip by as he fishes peacefully
on the verdant banks of the Loire with his good friend Edmond. Taking
Emile into his confidence, Edmond reveals that despite his advanced age he
still has an incredibly active love life - as the lurid paintings in his
studio amply demonstrate. Emile is upset when his friend dies suddenly
from a heart attack and decides there and then to follow his example and
live life to the full. He may be over seventy, but Emile suddenly feels
a resurgence of life in the presence of the dead man's former lover, Lucie.
He turns down an invitation to spend his holidays with his son and instead
he devotes himself to the young woman who has given him a new reason for
living...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.