Film Review
This tragicomic portrait of a dysfunctional Swiss family struggling to present a face
to the world that is the opposite to the gruesome reality is the first fictional film
from Jean-Stéphane Bron, who has already made a name for himself in the arena of film documentary
with
Connu de nos services (1997) and
La Bonne Conduite (5 histoires d'auto-école) (1999).
Whilst the film is slightly marred by a tentativeness on the part of the director,
which prevents him from pushing the drama into some interesting places (and hence revealing
why his characters behave as they do in a more subtle fashion), it is a strangely appealing
work which offers a depiction of a fragmented family that is both comical and deeply moving.
Stylistically,
Mon frère se marie is somewhat uneven, constantly shifting its perspective,
one minute farce, the next minute naturalistic drama, with the narrative broken up by
inserts in which one of the characters 'interviews' the other members of his family (a
device that is now used so often that it feels a tad clichéd, even if is used
well).
Fortunately, some convincing performances - particularly from Aurore Clément and Jean-Luc Bideau (a
leading Swiss actor who later appeared in the similar
La Famille Wolberg (2009))
- and a good script more than compensate for the film's deficiencies
in other areas. The film is at its most poignant and expressive in its moments of
calm and reflection, such as the last few minutes of the film where the family, reduced
to contemplative silence having been drained by the intense psychodrama that preceded,
achieves some kind of reconciliation and unity.
The film was later remade in America as
The Big Wedding (2013), directed by
Justin Zackham, and starring Robert De Niro and Diane Keaton.
© James Travers 2007
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Film Synopsis
For twenty years, Vietnamese refugee Vinh has lived with his adopted middle-class family
in Switzerland. By the time he decides to get married, the family has long since
broken up. His adopted father and mother are barely on speaking terms, and the relationship
between himself and his two adopted siblings is uncomfortable. When Vinh's mother,
still in Vietnam, writes to say that she intends to attend the wedding, the members of
his adopted family agree to put aside their differences and pretend to be the perfect
Swiss family. Things start out well enough, but on the day of the wedding, the strain
of the pretence becomes too much...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.