Film Review
The parallels between psychiatry and prostitution are so easily drawn
that it's a wonder no one has yet devised a sitcom based on this very
fact. Director Jeanne Labrune's attempts to make the connection between
the world's oldest profession and another popular couch-related
activity that comes with a high price tag are a little grating at
first, but all is forgiven when we become aware of the serious subtext
that lies beneath the seemingly facile surface. Heavily
dowsed in low grade sex comedy humour (of the kind that makes
'Allo 'Allo! look as though it was
written by Ionesco in one of his more inspired periods),
Sans queue ni tête doesn't
play the subtlety card too liberally and, at times, you could easily
mistake it for a militant feminist send-up of a Woody Allen film.
However, anyone familiar with Jeanne Labrune's previous films - which
range from the viscerally intense romantic drama
Si
je t'aime, prends garde à toi (1998) to the quirky
comedy
Ça ira mieux demain
(2000) - will have sufficient faith in the director to know that there
is a good deal more to this film than first meets the eye. Far
from being the vapid comedy it initially appears to be, this is
actually a thoughtful piece of commentary on one of the great social
malaises of our time - namely how the consumerist mindset devalues
human relationships and prevents us from having fulfilling and
purposeful lives.
Isabelle Huppert is the obvious casting choice for the lead female
character, a prostitute with the mother of all mind-care problems, and
the part certainly fits within her repertoire of feisty nymphettes
trapped in the body of an inscrutable middle-aged woman. As she
works her way through a dazzling variety of wigs and costumes
(including a libido-firing schoolgirl outfit), Huppert certainly
presses all of the right buttons and she has no difficulty engaging our
sympathies as the fault lines in her character's psychology become
frighteningly apparent. Bouli Lanners, her talented co-star, is
equally well-cast as the pent-up psychiatrist who sees a dose of
commercial sex as the solution to his own existential crisis, but his
efforts are somewhat frustrated by some obvious weaknesses in the
screenwriting which periodically make him look like a freakish
caricature.
Jeanne Labrunne begins with an excellent premise and has no difficulty
getting her humane message across, albeit in a way that is at times a
tad inelegant and demonstrative. At a superficial level,
Sans queue ni tête is a film
that is both enjoyable and pleasingly provocative, although the humour
is probably what might generously be termed an acquired taste (the
transsexual gags are so old they should be in the British Museum,
somewhere between the Egyptian relics and the Elgin
Marbles). Whilst the film engages with some serious themes with
insight and genuine concern (offering a timely indictment of the way
in which consumerism may be eroding the most essential aspects of our
humanity), its impact is slightly lessened by its strident tone and a careless
smattering of clichés.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jeanne Labrune film:
Si je t'aime, prends garde à toi (1998)
Film Synopsis
Alice and Xavier have both arrived at a turning point in their lives and
long for a change of direction. She is a prostitute who can no longer
stand her profession. He is a psychoanalyst who has had his fill of
listening to the self-pitying babbling of social inadequates and other assorted
misfits on his couch. She badly needs to talk to someone if she is
find her way out of her present impasse. He badly needs some female
company after his wife walked out on him. Alice would seem to be ideally
placed to give Xavier what he needs, and vice versa. Their meeting
appears to be providential. Could this be the beginning of a fresh
start for them both, or merely the overture to another disappointing adventure
that leads nowhere?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.