Film Review
Florence Quentin's third film has a little more substance than her
previous lightweight comedy offerings -
J'ai faim!!! (2001) and
Olé!
(2005) - but again suffers from an irksome tendency to try a little too
hard to get the laughs and characterisation that stretches caricature
far too far for the film to be remotely credible. Even with
spirited performances from stars of the calibre of André
Dussollier and Victoria Abril,
Leur
morale... et la nôtre struggles to hold the spectator's
interest and sitting through its ninety-plus minutes of strained comic
situations is something of an endurance test, relieved only
occasionally by the odd genuinely funny moment.
In contrast to Quentin's previous films, which deserve to be
overlooked, this one has a promising starting point, touching on many
of the ills that blight society today (people who habitually rip off
manufacturers, the insularity of suburban life, the hypocrisy of the
middle classes, etc). Unfortunately, the film fails to weave
these concerns into anything approaching an intelligent piece of social
commentary, and instead resorts to the lamest kind of stereotyping and
tedious comedy routines in a misguided attempt to extract cheap laughs,
with all the subtlety of a quack dentist bending over his patient
with a pair of pliers in one hand and a dirty great power drill in the other.
For diehard fans of Victoria Abril, the film is probably just about
bearable - but only just. Apart from insomniacs, sadomasochists
and other filmmakers who take a sadistic pleasure in learning from
other people's mistakes, everyone else should give it a very wide
berth.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
André and Muriel are a happily married French couple who make a
comfortable living by claiming refunds on products they buy from their
supermarket and later selling the same products in their shop at a
discount. The scam works fine until their next-door neighbour
succumbs to what looks like a fatal bout of food poisoning after eating
a frozen paella which they sold her. Fearing they might be sued,
the couple do what they can to conceal the fact they were responsible
for poisoning the old woman, whom they have good reason to believe will
leave them her house when she dies, as she has no other
relatives. Imagine then André and Muriel's surprise, if
not horror, when they learn that their neighbour has died and left all
her worldly goods to a young Arab man, who claims to be her
son. Xenophobic by nature, the couple immediately suspect
foul play and when the stranger moves in next door they resolve to
expose him as a criminal. They have no idea what they are getting
into...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.