Film Review
Cécile Telerman's adaptation of Katherine Pancol's 2006 best
selling novel
Les Yeux jaunes des
crocodiles has been one of the most eagerly anticipated French
films of 2014 but it falls way short of expectations. The film's
dazzling cast is certainly a powerful lure that few French film
aficionados will have the will to resist but, as we all know. a great
cast doesn't necessarily mean a great film. Telerman's film is
pedestrian at just about every level and any subtlety or barbed irony
in Pancol's book is curiously absent in this lukewarm adaptation.
With every character reduced to the most egregious kind of
one-dimensional caricature you could, if you tried, interpret the film
as a canny spoof of the kind of vapid comedy that cash-flow conscious
directors have been serving up over the past decade on both sides of
the Atlantic. Unfortunately, the film isn't even as clever as
that. It's just a shallow page-to-screen transposition totally
lacking in substance and deeper meaning.
Insipid as the film is, there is still enough star power behind it to
make it worth watching (just), although you have to wonder what induced
actors of the calibre of Emmanuelle Béart and Julie Depardieu to
lend their names such a bland and lazily concocted comedy. Forced
to play hideously one-sided archetypes (one an egoistical society
belle, the other a financially strapped academic), it is these two
leading ladies who come off worst. In their supporting
roles, Jacques Weber and Patrick Bruel have more freedom to make their
characters a little more convincing and manage to knock some real human
feeling (or at least the semblance of such) into the proceedings.
Through their combined efforts, the impeccable cast come close to
salvaging a comedy misfire, but, sad to say, it is the breathtaking
mediocrity of the writing and direction that win out in the end.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
This is the story of two sisters who could not be more different.
Joséphine, a historian who specialises in the twelfth century,
is struggling to cope with life's challenges. Iris, astonishingly
good-looking, leads a dissipated and comfortable life in Paris.
One evening, at a dinner party, Iris boasts that she has written a
novel. The lie backfires and she ends up having to ask her sister
to write the book under her name, so that Iris can pass herself off as
a published author. Crippled with debts after her husband walked
out on her, Joséphine is easily persuaded to accept her sister's
unusual commission. The book proves to be a bestseller and will
massively transform the two women's lives.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.