Film Review
Those who are not experts in the sacred art of cake-making may be
interested to know that a Pièce Montée is a cone-shaped
wedding cake whose main ingredients (profiteroles) are held together
with caramel. It is an over-sugared and flimsy-looking Phallic
representation which looks as if it may collapse at any moment in a horrible gooey
mess (not the most optimistic of symbols for a wedding day). The same
description could just as easily apply to
Denys Granier-Deferre's film of the same name, a toothless adaptation
of the award-winning satirical novel by Blandine Le Callet. This
sticky concoction of clichés and saccharine sentimentality is
about as palatable as the culinary nightmare which gives it its title,
but it has two things in its favour - the rivulets of dark humour that
run through it and the incomparable pairing of Danielle Darrieux and
Jean-Pierre Marielle, two of the last surviving
monstres sacrés of French
cinema.
The film is directed (if that is the word) by Denys Granier-Deferre - son of the
well-regarded French filmmaker Pierre Granier-Deferre, who helmed such
popular films as
Le Chat (1971) and
La
Veuve Couderc (1971). Granier-Deferre Junior's
filmmaking career got off to a flying start, with
Que les gros salaires lèvent le
doigt ! (1982) and
Réveillon chez Bob
(1984), but after the box office failure and critical onslaught that
greeted
Blanc de Chine
(1988), he turned his back on cinema and embarked on a very successful
career as a director for French television.
Pièce montée comes
16 years after Denys Granier-Deferre's last film for cinema,
Coma (1994), so it is hardly
surprising that it resembles a TV movie, and a pretty lacklustre one at
that. If it had been made for television, the film would probably
have fared somewhat better.
On the plus side,
Pièce
montée has an excellent cast, that includes (in
addition to the aforementioned cinema legends) such magnificent
performers as Jérémie Renier, Julie Depardieu, Aurore
Clément and Léa Drucker, although you'd be hard pressed
to find a single character in the film who is not an outright
caricature of the silliest kind.
The seemingly endless barrage of banal comic situations
rapidly becomes tiresome, and it doesn't help that most of the
gags are so well-worn that they ought to covered in patches.
Weddings lend themselves supremely well to
black comedy, so it is surprising that the film does not
capitalise on this and instead spends most of its time doling
out sitcom-style gags that ought to have been pensioned off years ago.
It is easy to see how much better this film could have been.
Denys Granier-Deferre and his screenwriter Jérôme
Soubeyrand have clearly missed an opportunity to deliver a really funny
assault on the phoney conventions that still prevail amongst the
snobbish middle classes, as well as
making some meaningful observations on how marriage is perceived by
society today. What could have been a mordant social satire is,
through a combination of lazy screenwriting and uninspired direction,
no more than a rather tedious lowbrow farce that would have been
out-dated if it had been made in the 1990s. Fortunately, a
magnificent duo (Darrieux and Marielle) are on hand to perform a
much-needed salvage operation (with tenderness and humour) - although
their efforts to inject some class and backbone into the film are only
partly successful and it still remains a pretty spineless comedy.
It does not help that the same subject has been treated far more
imaginatively in recent years, for example by Valérie
Guignabodet in
Mariages! (2004), a film that
is not only a lot punchier, but also much more true to life.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Vincent and Bérengère are young and deeply in love, but
are they sufficiently committed to one another to get through the one
great ordeal of their lives, their wedding day? The couple would
have preferred a quiet, modest affair, but to please their families
they agree to a grand traditional wedding with all the trimmings.
As the guests begin to assemble at the church, the first notes of
discord are sounded. It isn't long before Vincent and
Bérengère begin to realise that perhaps they are not
suited to one another after all...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.