Film Review
For her tenth feature, prize-winning director Tonie Marshall gives free rein
to her feminist impulses and serves up a timely full-on assault on
male dominance and brazen misogyny in the corporate world.
Numéro
une (a.k.a.
Number One) is a bold and well-meaning attempt to
engage with one of the burning issues of our time - a woman's right to parity
with her male counterparts in all spheres of employment - but it falls down
somewhat with its mare's nest of a plot.
Marshall has been a fully paid up member of the feminist movement for some
years, and earned her place in history by being the first woman to receive
the Best Director César in 1998 for her widely acclaimed film
Vénus beauté (institut).
No one can doubt her commitment to a worthwhile cause but her attempts to
militate for women's rights in her art have so far been a tad lacking in
conviction and efficacy.
Numéro une is the director's
most overtly feminist film yet, but it somewhat mutes its own message with
a lack of focus and superabundance of plot ideas that ultimately makes you
wonder exactly what point Marshall is trying to make.
A somewhat awkward attempt at combining political thriller with morality
play and character study,
Numéro une is centred on an ambitious
businesswoman's attempts to shatter the glass ceiling, regardless of the
consequences to herself and others. In this she is opposed not only
by formidable corporate males who have no intention of admitting a mere woman
into their closed circle of privilege, but also by her human limitations
- her insecurities (which she tries to keep under wraps) and her preoccupation
with her family, in particular her ageing father.
Marshall spares us none of the platitudes of how hard it is to be a successful
woman these days and were it not for her choice of lead actress - a magnificent
Emmanuelle Devos - we would struggle to have much in the way of sympathy
for her over-reaching heroine. Devos is a rare actress who can project
both inner vulnerability and indomitable resilience at the same time, making
her ideally suited for the role of Emmanuelle in Marshall's epic one-woman-against-the-world
saga. (The lead character's name can be read as an ironic dig at cinema's
exploitation of women in an earlier, less enlightened era.)
Devos is such a compelling performer that you wonder why she is absent for
so much of the time from the screen. Too often, the focus shifts jarringly
to poorly developed secondary characters in a myriad of subplots that only
succeed in drawing us further and further away from the core narrative strand,
Emmanuelle's increasingly fraught struggles to balance her professional and
personal needs.
Richard Berry obviously relishes his role as the Machiavellian corporate
boss Beaumel, but entertaining as his badass portrayal is, it is really little
more than a flagrant O.T.T. caricature. Far more convincing is Sami
Frey as Emmanuelle's dying father - his low-key scenes with Devos help to
bring out the human side in her character, providing a badly needed counterpoint
to the rancid inhuman nastiness that characterises Marshall's jaundiced
view of the corporate world.
With its excess of plot and dearth of fully developed characters,
Numéro
une looks painfully like a ten-part television series that has been aggressively
concertinaed into a two-hour feature. There is only so much that a
performer of Emmanuelle Devos's capability can offer to make up for the obvious
lack of discipline on the writing side, and here the contest is cruelly one-sided.
Francis Girod's
La Banquière
(1980) and Claude Chabrol's
L'Ivresse
du pouvoir (2006) both deliver far more convincing representations
of women in positions of power. By contrast, Tonie Marshall's attempt
at fashioning a modern Amazonian is hazy and half-hearted. Doubtless
the director has important moral points to make, but these are muffled to
the point of incomprehensibility by a topsy-like narrative that completely
runs away with itself.
© James Travers 2017
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Film Synopsis
In spite of a prevailing mindset in the workplace that still prevents women
from getting to the top, Emmanuelle Blachey has made a success of her career
as an engineer and is now hoping to make her mark as a captain of industry.
Encouraged by the pro-women lobbyist Adrienne Postel-Devaux, she puts herself
forward for the post of chief executive at a leading blue chip company.
Emmanuelle's attempts to stamp her authority on her new role are frustrated
by her professional rivals, in particular Jean Beaumel, an arch-manipulator
who has his own sordid reasons for ensuring that she fails in her job.
Further complications arise when Emmanuelle's number two is dismissed and
attempts suicide, just as her elderly father has a stroke that confines him
to hospital. The fiercely independent career woman soon discovers that
she is fighting battles on multiple fronts, in both her increasingly complicated
private and professional lives. Old attitudes to women in position
of power continue to threaten both her authority and her ability to get things
done, but despite all this Emmanuelle is determined not to be beaten.
Her enemies like to think they are still living in a man's world, but she
will do everything she can to prove otherwise...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.