Film Review
For her third feature - after the excellent
Un poison violent (2010)
and somewhat less impressive
Suzanne (2013) - director Katell Quillévéré
takes on her greatest challenge yet by adapting Maylis de Kerangal's 2013
novel
Réparer les vivants, a moving tale that received acclaim
for its sensitive handling of the problematic issue of organ transfer.
Quillévéré's film has its inspired moments but it hardly
does justice to Kerangal's remarkable novel and at times it struggles be
more convincing than a second rate television medical drama, with writing
and performances to match. The director's honourable intentions of
evoking something of the haunting poetry of the original novel go somewhat
awry, resulting in a surfeit of off-putting cinematic bravura in the first
half of her film and an ungainly mix of melodrama and documentary in the
second half.
Réparer les vivants's biggest shortcoming is an inadequate
script that serves up bite-size chunks of incident that, together, fail to
cohere into a satisfying whole. Torn between soppy melodrama and trenchant
realism, the director appears to have opted for the former, with a cast of
predominately big-name actors (Tahar Rahim, Emmanuelle Seigner, Kool Shen,
Bouli Lanners, Dominique Blanc) squandered in thinly sketched, archetypal
characters that barely have time to establish themselves. Some showy
grandiloquence on both the cinematographic and music fronts also help to
dent the film's credibility and serve merely to give the impression that
this is a film intended to beat an emotional response out of the spectator
instead of gently engaging our feelings. If there is any subtlety to
this film, it is
incredibly well hidden.
Things get off to a fairly promising start with the introduction of the character,
Simon, who is destined to end up as a brain-dead organ donor. Of course,
knowing his fate, Quillévéré has to overstate what a
tragedy his untimely death will be by (over)stressing how full his life is,
with an adoring girlfriend and passion for riding the surf. (Stunning
though the surfing scenes are, they cannot help resembling an advertisement
for a brand of aftershave lotion.) Then, when the well-signposted disaster
happens, practically no cliché is left unturned as the plot segues
into that of a mediocre episode of your favourite TV hospital series.
Because we are not given the opportunity to get to know any of the protagonists
it's no surprise that we can only engage with them at a
very superficial
level, but some disgraceful over-acting and some hideously over-done music
help to drag out of us the appropriate emotional response, with as much refined
subtlety as a circus clown extracting a back tooth from an elephant with
a knackered pair of pliers.
Not sooner have we been dragged through one sentimental dung heap than we
are well on our way towards another, as the attention now focuses on another
character (about whom we learn next to nothing other than that she is 50,
a mother and a musician) who is about to have a life-saving heart op, courtesy
of the cruelly deceased surfer. This is where the film really loses
its direction and becomes a soulless muddle intended for art house junkies
alone. Clearly having failed to learn from the mistakes she made on
her last film, Quillévéré gives up totally on trying
to make her characters convincing and they become animated lumps of flesh,
as devoid of personality as the extracted organ that is the only thing holding
the rambling drama together.
Réparer les vivants is by no means
a disaster but, with coherence and restraint in such obvious short supply,
and seemingly drunk on its own vacuous artistrty, it fails to have even a
modest fraction of the impact of Kerangal's extraordinary novel.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Simon, a man in his early twenties, likes nothing better than to go surfing
with his mates. On the way back home from one of their surfing trips
on the north coast of France, Simon and his friends are involved in a car
accident. Transported to a hospital in Le Havre, Simon's life hangs
in the balance, but it soon becomes apparent that he will never regain consciousness.
His parents are notified and are presented with an impossible decision -
not only to consent to the termination of their son's life but also to the
removal of his heart. Meanwhile, in Paris, a 50-year-old musician and
mother of two is awaiting a heart transplant operation that will save her
life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.