Film Review
Anyone who has ever flown with any of the low cost airlines will
doubtless have accumulated a stack of anecdotes which are more readily
assembled than a piece of IKEA furniture into a sidesplitting
feature-length comedy. Such appears to be the case with Maurice
Barthélemy, whose frenetic comedy
Low Cost looks as much like a
personal compendium of painfully lived experiences as it does a
merciless propaganda film from Air France. Had the film stuck to
real-life incident it would have made an entertaining enough film, but
Barthélemy obviously thought that would make it too banal so
instead it jets off into the realms of fantasy and becomes a mix of
disaster movie spoof (à la
Airplane
(1980), but nowhere near as good) and zany survival movie, with some
truly gruesome black comedy thrown in for good measure. It's a
crazy concoction which is entertaining in parts, although it may have
you reaching for the sick bag in others.
After Barthélemy's previous two low key directorial efforts -
Casablanca Driver (2004) and
Papa
(2005) -
Low Cost looks
positively unhinged, a succession of comedy sketches (some appalling,
some totally hilarious) haphazardly slung together apparently with
little thought as to whether it will all hold together. Actually,
the film does just about make it off the ground, and it does just about
manage to come down to earth in the end, but the journey in between is
as uncomfortable as Hell and not one you would ever want to repeat - a
more apt metaphor for a budget airline flight you can hardly
imagine. If nothing else, the film lives up to its name - it
could hardly do otherwise with virtually all of the action confined to
the interior of a Boeing 737.
Jean-Paul Rouve, Judith Godrèche and Gérard Darmon are
the main casualties of Barthélemy's shoestring flight of
fancy. None of this illustrious trio has ever looked more
ridiculous nor failed to add value so spectacularly as they do
here. They are the dead weight that the film should have
jettisoned in its first ten minutes, allowing the more interesting, and
far funnier, supporting artistes - an extremely weird mix of
personalities - to take over the flying asylum. Rouve apparently
has a small person phobia, which is unfortunate as one of his fellow
passengers is a dwarf who is sensitive about his height.
Godrèche is an airhostess who for some unfathomable reason falls
for Rouve (an industrial spy named Dagobert) and is fool enough to
remain on the plane when Darmon, a retired pilot (or so he says),
offers to take it back home when the real pilot refuses to play
ball. Most of the film involves Rouve, Godrèche and Darmon
fielding bad jokes and trying hard not to look like disgruntled
passengers who wished they had booked onto a classier flight. The
real fun of the film lies elsewhere, in the other characters who look
scarily like what you would expect to find on a low cost flight.
It is this oddly likeable assortment of hypochondriacs, neurotics,
bigots and general all-round weirdos that anchor the film in
reality and prevent it from climbing too far into the heights of
infantile absurdity.
When the plane is up in the air, the humour come freely enough, but
when it touches down for a protracted stopover in some unspecified
desert backwater inhabited only by camels and gun-toting cannibals the
gag machine suffers an acute attack of bad taste and the gags become
less digestible than whatever pre-packed mush they serve on budget
flights at extortionate prices. Black comedy is an art the French
have never quite mastered and it shows throughout this long and mostly
humourless sequence, in which most of the jokes which are not overtly
racist and misogynistic revolve around someone having to remove a body
part from a corpse. A brilliant pedicurist gag just about makes
this bearable.
Several gruesome deaths later (all intended in a comic vein,
naturellement), the flight resumes with Darmon thankfully relegated to
his passenger's seat. It's at this judicious moment that
Barthélemy fires up the comedy engines, making up for the
preceding lapse with a much funnier sequence involving a dwarf, his pet
rat and a musophobic goth with hi-jacking tendencies. It's the
full budget airline experience all right, cheap and choppy with enough
sick-making incidents en route to make you wish you had made
alternative arrangements. But isn't that the fun of flying low
cost?
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
For the passengers on a low cost flight from Djerba to Paris Beauvais,
their journey gets off to a bad start when their departure is delayed
for eight hours because of a fault with the plane's air
conditioning. Rather than wait, they prefer to take their chances
by allowing a complete stranger, Jean-Claude, to pilot the plane back
to France. Jean-Claude is proud of his long service with a proper
airline (Air France), but somehow his navigational skills have gone to
pot since he retired and the plane ends up landing in an unrecognisable
stretch of desert. Before they know it, the passengers are
attacked by gun-wielding barbarians who threaten to kill them.
From here on, things can only get worse...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.