Film Review
From the sublime to the downright ridiculous. After regaling us
with one his best films, the feisty historical romp that was
La Princesse de Montpensier
(2010), director Bertrand Tavernier takes an ungainly nosedive into
mediocrity as he essays his first foray into mainstream comedy.
France's most eclectic filmmaker, Tavernier's manic genre hopping has
long ceased to be a cause of surprise but his latest film will leave
many of his admirers totally dumbfounded, and not for any of the right
reasons.
Quai d'Orsay
exemplifies everything that is wrong with mainstream French cinema at
the moment (primarily the assumption that everyone who goes to watch a
film these days suffers from chronic attention deficit disorder) and it
staggers belief that a director as intelligent and experienced as
Tavernier should be complicit in yet another atrocity against our
beloved seventh art.
The film is the latest hopelessly misfired attempt to bring to the big
screen a popular francophone comic book, this time Christophe Blain and
Abel Lanzac's hugely popular
Quai
d'Orsay, in which one of the authors (Lanzac, the penname of
former French diplomat Antonin Baudry) drew on his experiences in the
French Foreign Office. Unable to (or perhaps unwilling to)
embrace some of the weirder aspects of the graphic novel (such as the
main character's obsession with
Star
Wars), Tavernier dispenses with much of its charm and
originality in an attempt to carve up a more down-to-earth political
satire. The way he attempts to retain the pace and zaniness of
the original book is to combine screwball-style comic performances
(fast-talking actors who can't seem to stay on the same spot for a
second) with a frenetic style of editing, which includes excessive use
of split-screen, and vertiginous camera motion. The result is a
lumbering incoherent mess of a film, and whatever humour is in the
original premise is totally smothered by the film's annoying excesses
in just about every department. With the film running for just
under two hours, you need an awful lot of patience and stamina to see
it through to the end. I only did it for a bet.
The main source of irritation is Thierry Lhermitte's hyperactive lead
character, who is too obviously based on France's former foreign
minister Dominique de Villepin, famously the man who said 'non' to
France's involvement in the Iraq War (and therefore qualifies for
instant sainthood in my book). Whilst it is hard not to be
impressed by the extraordinary energy and commitment that Lhermitte
puts into his performance, rattling out his lines as if he is wired up
to the mains, his O.T.T. caricature of a man who is already a walking
caricature is hard to endure for more than a few minutes. Banging
yourself repeatedly over the head with a thick plank of wood whilst
chewing glass is only marginally more uncomfortable than watching
Lhermitte slaughter the art of comedy, more effectively than a clown
performing harakiri in a perpetual time loop.
Robbed of his flights of fancy, the other principal character (Arthur
Vlaminck) is watered down to the level of a bland comedy stooge, and
Raphaël Personnaz's lack of presence does little to endear us to
the put-upon intern whose encounters with Lhermitte are about as
amusing as a WWI squaddy walking nonchalantly towards an enemy
machine-gun post. Niels Arestrup fares far better as the Foreign
Officer chief of staff. Although not a natural comedy performer
(he is better known as a dour straight character actor), Arestrup
somehow manages to inject some humour into the proceedings and is by
far the best thing about the film. Alas, it takes more than one
good actor to save a sinking ocean liner. If the film
tells us anything it is that comedy is
most definitely not Bertrand Tavernier's forte.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Bertrand Tavernier film:
L'Horloger de Saint-Paul (1974)
Film Synopsis
Alexandre Taillard de Worms is France's Foreign Minister, an imposing
figure who, endowed with a rare talent for defusing conflict and
engendering calm wherever he goes, looks like being a future recipient
of the Nobel Prize for Peace. Arthur Vlaminck, a recent ENA
graduate, obtains a post in the Foreign Office. His duties
include writing speeches for the Minister, but before he can do so he
must first come to grips with the protocols of his new milieu within
the walls of the Quai d'Orsay. As he oversees the future of the
world, his efforts are threatened by the inertia of the technocrats...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.