Film Review
Having attracted an audience of over 12 million, it's the film that is
likely to be the biggest home produced hit at the French box office in
2014, but will it have any impact outside France? Probably
not.
Qu'est-ce qu'on a fait au
Bon Dieu? touches on two of the most pressing issues in France
today - racial prejudice and national identity - but it is a
quintessential mainstream French comedy and its marketability abroad
is, to say the least, limited. Judging by other French mainstream
chart toppers in recent years -
Les
Profs in 2013 and
Sur la piste du Marsupilami in
2012 - what gets 'bums on seats' in French cinemas is not quality or
considered introspection but a cobbled together frenzy of facile comedy
situations and a distribution campaign executed with ruthless
efficiency. 2014's French box office wonder is more of the same,
low brow entertainment for a mass audience that would rather have a
bellyful of easy laughs than a dose of cultural enlightenment.
The most tragic thing about
Qu'est-ce
qu'on a fait au Bon Dieu? (it's English language title -
Serial (Bad) Weddings - is just as
ugly and forgettable) is that it starts with an excellent, highly
topical premise but fails to make anything of it. There
is an obvious resonance with 2011's mainstream hit
Intouchables
(2011), but whereas that film came at the issue of racial intolerance
from an unusual angle and had something sensible to say on the subject,
2014's racially-themed comedy is nothing more than a haphazard morass
of predictable (mostly dated) gags, borrowed plot ideas, poorly
developed characters and a pro-multiculturalism 'message' that is
broadcast so often and so loudly that it risks driving the spectator
into the welcoming arms of Marine Le Pen.
By now, the film's director Philippe de Chauveron has grown accustomed
to mainstream success. Having scripted the inexplicably popular
Neuilly
sa mère! (2009) he struck box office gold with his
ungainly comicbook adaptation
L'Elève Ducobu (2011),
and its sequel. Chauveron's fifth film is more obviously geared
towards an adult audience than the two that preceded it but it offers
the same wearying barrage of drawn out, unfunny gags and actors so
hyperactive that you'd swear they were either wired up to the mains or
else od'ed on Prozac before each take. There was a time when
Christian Clavier was one of the funniest men in French cinema.
Here, looking like a horrible approximation to a poor man's Louis de
Funès (grouchy but not remotely funny), he is as easy to endure
as a severe attack of dyspepsia. Fortunately, it is possible to
discern some talent in the cast of young and relatively unknown
performers, but this is largely wasted on a middling-to-poor screenplay
that should have gone through at least a dozen re-writes before it went
anywhere near a film camera. If only a little more care and
discretion had gone into the writing, this could have been a
half-decent, readily exportable comedy.
Even allowing for the film's brilliant distribution strategy and the
apparent lack of discernment in today's French cinema audience, it is
hard to account for the phenomenal popularity of what is essentially a
chronically over-hyped, badly written comedy. Its attempts
to get to grips with one of the most pressing concerns facing modern
France are at best half-hearted and all we get is a dreary downpour of
unsophisticated gags and stale platitudes. Recent electoral gains
by the Front National and escalating racial tensions across France,
both fuelled by concerns over immigration, have heightened awareness
about race and racial identity. With one in five marriages (or equivalent) in France now involving
couples of mixed faith or racial origin (way, way above the European
average), it would seem that multiculturalism is becoming a hard and
fast reality of French life, and may be this is why Chauveron's
simplistic film has found such a large audience. The film's
depiction of a sea change in racial acceptance from one generation to
the next breathes hope for the future, although its conclusion, that
even the bigots will see the light and bury the hatchet in the end, is
perhaps a tad optimistic.
Qu'est-ce
qu'on a fait au Bon Dieu? is about as superficial and clumsy as
a French mainstream comedy can be, but it offers a tantalising vision
of a world where racial intolerance is rapidly heading for
extinction. That might well be the secret of its success.
Or maybe the French just like to laugh at bad jokes.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Claude Verneuil and his wife Marie are Gaullist bourgeois Catholics,
and proud of it. Even though they are staunch traditionalists,
they like to think they can move with the times. Their
willingness to do just this has been sorely tested when their three
eldest daughters chose to marry, respectively, a Muslim, a Jew and a
Chinese man. Their most fervent wish, to see one of their offspring
married in church, could well come true when their youngest daughter
announces that she intends to marry a Catholic named Charles.
Unfortunately, the next prospective son-in-law is not quite what Claude
and Marie had hoped for...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.