Film Review
In her feature debut,
Papa
lumière, director Ada Loueilh references her own early
years in a lowkey drama that explores the awkward relationship between
an estranged father and daughter as they separately come to terms with
an enforced exile in a foreign land, namely France. Loueilh's film is
full of good intentions, boasts a strong central performance and
contains one or two powerful scenes but it struggles to engage the
audience's sympathies, being hampered by a lacklustre script that lacks
depth and a light touch directorial approach that is conspicuous by its
absence.
Flawed as the film is, it does have one ace up its sleeve, which is the
ever-dependable Niels Arestrup in yet another role that appears to have
been tailor-made for him. Arestrup has an Atlas-like job bearing
pretty well the entire weight of the film, but he does so with his
customary aplomb and what he offers us is a commendably sincere
portrayal of a man who is pushed to the brink having lost his friends,
fortune and reputation when fleeing the civil war in Ivory Coast and
then having to face the ignominy of being ill-treated by his country of
origin. This latter theme strikes an immediate chord as immigration is
one of the hot topics in France at the moment. The fact that
Arestrup's character is a French expatriate who is offered few favours
on returning to his native land shows how thorny an issue immigration
is in France.
Arestrup's performance has enough meat and gristle on it to make the
film worth watching (just), although his scenes with newcomer Julia
Coma, playing his on-screen daughter, aren't as convincing as you would
hope (again, because of a weak script that fails to develop the
characters sufficiently). Heavy on pathos but low on real
sentiment,
Papa lumière
makes fairly depressing viewing, although the film is at least partly
redeemed by the solid contribution from its lead actor, who
lives up to his reputation as a giant of French cinema.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In April 2011, Jacques and Safi land at Charles de Gaulle airport in
Paris, after being urgently repatriated from Abidjan. His skin is
dark-tanned by his life in Africa where he worked as a hotelier; she is
his fourteen-year-old daughter, a half-caste. Before her
departure, Safi had grown used to living with her mother and she is
unsure what to make of the garrulous father who took her away by
force. Arriving at a reception centre in Nice, the father and
daughter finally have the chance to get to know one another, perhaps
even to love one another. But there is also Gloria, Safi's mother
who has been left behind in a country in turmoil and seemingly
unreachable...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.