Film Review
For some people, Anne Fontaine's latest fumbling attempt at a social
satire could
well be their
worst nightmare. Take three grossly overpaid actors (all,
arguably, past their prime), plonk them in a hideously contrived
narrative that has scarcely an original idea in it, and marinate for
roughly ninety minutes in a thick sauce of well-worn clichés
until the resultant sickly residue is well and truly
indigestible.
Mon pire
cauchemar is as vacuous and predictable as it is stale and
distasteful, and it is hard to discern so much of a glimmer of
calculated irony or genuine human feeling behind the barefaced
caricature that Fontaine falls back on as a lazy substitute for
true-to-life characterisation.
It is hard to imagine how a film that brings together Isabelle Huppert,
Benoît Poelvoorde and André Dussollier could go so badly
wrong, but Fontaine's chief mistake was to assign each of these actors
to roles that are so obviously a crude amalgam of the ones they are most
associated with. Huppert is the frigid dominatrix bourgeois
sophisticate with a perverse streak, Poelvoorde the foul mouthed
uneducated pleb who keeps his brains in his underpants and Dussollier
the maritally oppressed bourgeois intellectual who pounces on the first
pretty young thing that comes his way. Imagine how much more
interesting the film might have been if Huppert and Poelvoorde's roles
had been reversed, with Huppert playing the gobby tramp to Poelvoorde's
snobby art promoter! If only the characters had been allowed to
develop, if only their stereotypical class traits had been mere surface
affectation, the film might have had some merit. But no, what you
see is what you get - Fontaine would rather have fun playing with crude
stereotypes in a grotesque parody of an American rom-com than deal with
real people and real emotions in real situations. Alas, the
humour is as strained and torturous as the plot and, after a promising
start,
Mon pire cauchemar
soon becomes wearisome to the point that it does end up feeling like
your worst nightmare.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Anne Fontaine film:
Gemma Bovery (2014)
Film Synopsis
Agathe Dambreville leads a comfortable bourgeois existence with her
publisher husband François and their teenage son. Patrick lives alone
with his son in the back of a van. Agathe manages a prestigious foundation of contemporary
art. Patrick just about gets by with state handouts and odd
jobs. They have nothing in common, so it is hardly surprising
that they fail to hit it off. Their paths would never have
crossed had it not been for the fact their sons attend the same school
and have become the best of friends. Blissfully unaware that her husband has
begun an affair with a younger woman, Agathe finds herself seeing
Patrick more often than their social circumstances would appear to allow...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.