Film Review
After a series of tepid and frankly bizarre excursions into the realms
of self-indulgent whimsy (
Angel,
Ricky,
Le
Refuge), director François Ozon shows a magnificent
return to form with his latest film, a classic battle of the sexes
comedy which prompts us to ask ourselves whether women today do enjoy
the same rights and freedoms as men or whether sexual equality still
remains a distant dream.
Potiche
may be set in 1977, around the time when the Women's Liberation
movement came to be a force worth reckoning with, but it is clearly
intended as wry commentary on gender politics in the 21st
century. The film is loosely based on a hit stage play of the
same title by Pierre Barillet and Jean-Pierre Grédy, which was
first performed in 1980 with Jacqueline Maillan in the lead role.
Ozon reworks the play into a 1970s-era social farce which superficially
resembles a pro-feminist satire, but which is in fact a subtle study in
identity, in keeping with much of the director's work to date.
Headlining Ozon's most prestigious cast list to date are Catherine
Deneuve and Depardieu, their seventh screen collaboration in thirty
years (and neither looks much the worse for wear). The on-screen
magic is still there, and even though Depardieu is cast in one of his
more macho roles, Deneuve still manages to look as though she is the
one with the Y chromosome, even if outwardly she resembles the acme of
grace and femininity. The part of Suzanne Pujol is a gift for
Deneuve, allowing her to do what she does best, playing a strong but
sympathetic woman with comic verve, wiping the floor with her male
co-stars as she does so. (The fact that she ends up running an
umbrella factory is a cheeky nod to the film that made the actress a
star,
Les Parapluies de Cherbourg.)
Although Deneuve's portrayal here does bring to mind those ghastly
caricatures of iron-willed women that were endemic in soaps and sitcoms
of the 1970s and 80s (doubtless influenced by a certain British Prime
Minister of the time), there is also a reality and human side to her
character, something that is perhaps lacking in most of the other
protagonists. Whilst it is a treat to sit back and watch an
ensemble that includes such talented performers as Fabrice Luchini,
Karin Viard, Judith Godrèche, Jérémie Renier and
Sergi López, the sheer abundance of star power in this film does
feel a little gratuitous and distracts needlessly from the film's
deeper messages.
It is gratifying to see Ozon return to the gloriously kitsch
stylisation of his early films,
Sitcom (1998),
Gouttes d'eau sur pierres brûlantes
(2000) and
8 femmes (2002). What
made Ozon such an interesting and likeable director in his early years
was the almost surreal theatricality of his mise-en-scène, which
somehow rendered his explorations of identity both provocative and
sinister. In
Potiche,
Ozon ups the kitsch quotient even further and projects us into what
feels like some kind of ghastly tribute to late 1970s television, a
time when glamour troopers like Farrah Fawcett and Stefanie Powers were
out in force (often in tight-fitting tracksuits), attempting to strike
a blow for female equality whilst carelessly firing just about every
adolescent male fantasy as they did so. The dialogue sounds
phoney, the story is ludicrously contrived, and yet, for all its
apparent falseness, the film somehow manages to ring true - a slice of
life viewed through the prism of a tacky old sitcom.
Like the two directors who appear to have had the greatest influence on
him - Douglas Sirk and Rainer Fassbinder - Ozon employs a style of
cinema that is trashy, démodé and easily open to
ridicule, so that he can sneakily make a damning critique of
contemporary society without anyone (other than the enlightened
minority) noticing. You have to be either French or up to date
with French current affairs to catch the anachronistic little in-jokes
which give the film its piquancy. Deneuve's character was
apparently inspired by Ségolène Royal, the Socialist
Party candidate in the 2007 French Presidential election, whilst
Fabrice Luchini's character clearly owes something to alpha male
Nicolas Sarkozy, even borrowing his tough love, macho posturing
rhetoric. This reinforces the impression that
Potiche is very much a film for our
time, one that questions what gender equality really is and whether it
is indeed desirable for men and women to be equal in every
respect. François Ozon leaves us with much food for
thought whilst dishing out plenty of laughs along the way in
this slick, star-fuelled comedy.
© James Travers 2011
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Next François Ozon film:
Dans la maison (2012)
Film Synopsis
In 1977, Robert Pujol is the owner of an umbrella factory, which he
runs with an iron hand. At home, he treats his wife Suzanne and
their grown-up children, Joëlle and Laurent, in the same despotic
manner as his unfortunate employees. When a strike is declared,
Robert falls ill and his wife has to wade into the breach, aided by the
town's mayor Maurice Babin, her one-time lover. As she takes over
the running of the factory, Suzanne soon proves that she is better
suited for the job than her husband. When Robert returns after a
rest cure he is horrified to discover that his wife has no intention of
giving up her newly acquired freedom...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.