Film Review
Twenty-three years after his last film,
Les Deux crocodiles (1987),
director Joël Séria makes a belated return to French cinema
with this banal but strangely likeable chronicle of wall-to-wall child
abuse set in a picturesque French village of the 1940s. It has
taken Séria almost twenty years to bring this autobiographical
account of his childhood experiences to the big screen, and that
probably explains why the film feels somewhat stilted and dated.
The stylistic and narrative flair that Séria brought to his most
celebrated film,
Les Galettes de Pont-Aven
(1975), is noticeably absent from this tepid replay of Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959), although
the film does have a few things in its favour, not least of which is a
charming cinematic style that effectively evokes the era in which the
story is set.
Mumu suffers somewhat from
being the latest in a spate of films dealing with the traumas of
childhood in post-war France. Christophe Barratier's
Les Choristes (2004) and Yves
Hanchar's
Sans rancune (2009), arguably
the two best examples of the genre so far, have told us as much as we
need to know about what children suffered through the hellish union of
post-war austerity, parental neglect and brutal teaching methods.
Mumu offers pretty much more
of the same, another generous helping of childhood misery, served in a
piquant sauce of self-pity and parental loathing, although it somehow
manages to avoid the excruciating mawkishness to which this kind of
film is particularly prone.
To its credit, the film does not take itself too seriously.
Whilst some of what it shows us is shockingly brutal (the scene in
which a father viciously lashes out and kicks his 11-year-old son is
barely watchable) there is also a fair smattering of humour. Some
will doubtless fault Séria's mise-en-scène for being too
conventional, but it is appropriate for this kind of film as it helps
to emphasise the temporal separation between ourselves and the subject
of the film. In contrast to so many recent period films,
Mumu really does look as if it is
set in the 1940s. The only thing that gives the game away is that
none of the child characters looks as if he inhabits this era.
Self-conscious and equipped
with a well-developed paunch, each member of Séria's ensemble of child actors
appears to have
circa 2009
stamped on his forehead. Such a pity that CGI effects technology is
not yet sufficiently advanced to enable filmmakers to morph today's
smug, chubby-faced infants into the withdrawn emaciated urchins of
yesteryear. At the very least, Séria could have asked his
child actors to lay off the crisps and hamburgers for a few weeks prior
to filming, if only for the scene in which they strip to their
underwear and go frolicking about in a river, something that
comes scarily close to looking like a remake of
The Blob. At least
we now know what happened to the European butter mountain.
It would be interesting to know exactly what criteria Séria's
casting director used to select the child actors - acting ability,
charisma and a modest girth were presumably way down on the list of requirements.
Apart from Balthazar Dejean de la Bâtie, who at least manages to win our sympathy as the
snivelling punch-bag Roger, there is barely a homeopathic dose of
talent amongst the child portion of the cast. This might explain
why Sylvie Testud looks as if she has been pumped full of steroids,
shamelessly overacting in an attempt to fill the histrionic void
created by her plump little co-stars. With her colourful
portrayal of the archetypal folcoche, Testud at least manages to
energise the film and make it far more entertaining than it might have
been, but falls somewhat short of making her character completely
convincing. It is only in her very last scene, a heart-breaker if
ever there was one, that we recognise her as the great actress that
she is.
Mumu is such a fascinating character - so severe on the outside, and
yet capable of such affection and warmth when provoked - that it is a
great pity that Séria did not go the extra mile and make her the
centre of the film instead of distracting us with pointless
digressions. Only one character in this film is entirely
convincing, the ludicrously hypocritical priest, played to perfection
by Jean-François Balmer. Most of the other adult
protagonists - notably the bullying father played by Dominique Pinon -
are little more than grotesque caricatures. Cameo
appearances by Michel Galabru and Antoine de Caunes serve only as
unwelcome distractions from what the film should be about, the unlikely
relationship between the unloved Roger and the seemingly loveless Mumu.
For all its shortcomings,
Mumu is a film that is easy to engage
with, mainly because Séria never lets us forget he is telling
his own story. As in Truffaut's film, we are compelled to
empathise with the brutalised child protagonist and feel his pain,
resentment and crushing sense of despair as he endures the injustices
that are thrown his way and tries, in vain, to win the affection of the
parents who have chosen to despise him. Little Roger would
doubtless have ended up as one of life's failures, a scoundrel, a suicide
or a double-glazing salesman, had it not been for the sympathetic attention of a dowdy
fire-breathing schoolmistress with a heart of gold.
Mumu may not
be a faultless piece of cinema but it is not without value. It
forces us to reflect on our own experiences and acknowledge the debt
we owe to those selfless individuals who not only equipped us with an
education but also gave us a sense of self-worth and identity.
Just where would we be without people like Mumu?
© James Travers 2011
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