Film Review
In common with many of Benoit Jacquot's films,
Pas de scandale is an intensely
sombre character study centred around one person experiencing a mid-life crisis.
This time, his subject is a company executive who is attempting to rebuild his life after
serving a prison sentence which has destroyed not just his public reputation but his self
confidence.
The film is to some extent successful in portraying the impact of a prison sentence on
someone who previously enjoyed the privilege of wealth and public esteem. Fabrice Luchini
would seem to be an unlikely choice for this role, but he is actually very well cast,
and his uncharacteristically withdrawn, subtle performance is probably the main reason
for watching the film.
Unfortunately, apart from Luchini's performance, the film is something of a disappointment.
Not only does it feel contrived and artificial, lacking warmth and humanity, but the plot
relies far too heavily on unlikely coincidences and unconvincing developments.
The film lacks the poignant realism and focus of Jacquot's earlier triumphs, failing to
engage the audience, even when the director has such stars as Isabelle Huppert and
Vincent Lindon at his disposal.
© James Travers 2001
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Next Benoît Jacquot film:
La Fausse suivante (2000)
Film Synopsis
Grégoire Jeancourt is a company director who has just come out of
prison after completing a four month sentence for fraud. When his wife
Agnès meets him in a café she is struck by how much he has
changed in so short a time. She finds it hard to engage him in conversation
and there appears to be an unbridgeable gulf between them. His brother
Louis, a talk show host, is equally concerned and, thinking it may help him
to regain his confidence, he invites Grégoire to take part in a television
interview. It is a futile gesture as the once outgoing businessman
now seems to have nothing to say. Returning to his apartment, he takes
up residence in an unused room and makes it clear to his wife that he still
loves and needs her, even if he struggles to express his true feelings.
The most noticeable change in Grégoire's behaviour is how he relates
to other people. He seems to have nothing but contempt for his own
class. In fact, the only people he has any sympathy for are those he
hardly noticed before he went to prison - people like Stéphanie, his
wife's hairdresser. For some reason, Grégoire finds it easy
to talk to this woman, with whom he has nothing in common - except the fact
that her boyfriend William has just completed a prison stretch. In
fact, the two men met in prison and Grégoire is surprised to see William
in a café on the very day he goes back to work. Relations between
Louis and his brother have always been difficult since their father favoured
Grégoire in his will, but they become even more strained when, during
a dinner party to celebrate their mother's birthday, Louis drops his bombshell...
© James Travers
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