Film Review
Somewhere, beneath the avalanche of clichés, trite
sentimentality and tedious navel gazing, there is a good film
struggling to get out here.
Si
c'était lui... begins with a very promising premise - a
man and a woman from completely different social milieux slowly
overcome their prejudices and fall madly in love. Unfortunately,
the story is so obviously taken from a bourgeois intellectual
perspective that it just fails to ring true. Far from
identifying, in a humane and intelligent way, with the marginalised and
homeless, it wallows in a kind of dated stereotypical view that is
frankly offensive.
Despite a very creditable performance from Marc Lavoine (an actor of
great promise who has yet to fulfil his potential), the main male
character is little more than a two-dimensional caricature - en
embittered down and out who is obsessed with films (and of course he
loves Capra). The only reason why Carole Bouquet's
character is more convincing is because the actress has become so
associated with the role of the bourgeois intellectual that she hardly
needs to act the part. Neither actor is given much
opportunity to show his or her worth, and so what might so easily have
been a great film ends up as merely just another lacklustre romance.
It is hard to imagine that Anne-Marie Etienne had scripted and directed
two full-length films before this.
Si c'était lui... feels
painfully like a debut feature, showing the kind of flaws that you
would not expect from an experienced filmmaker - futile attempts at
humour that merely cause you to grind your teeth in frustration
(Florence Foresti's scenes in particular) and so many clichés
that the film often looks like a compilation of French films of the
past twenty years. The only thing going for this film is the
judicious Bouquet-Lavoine pairing, but even this is not enough to make
it worth the effort of watching it.
© James Travers 2011
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Film Synopsis
Valentin is a young man who has lost everything: his girlfriend, his
job and his apartment. Depressed about his present predicament
and future prospects, he ends up squatting in his uncle's flat in an
upmarket neighbourhood. Next door to him lives
Hélène, a successful writer, and her son
Jérémy. An independently minded woman,
Hélène resents the inequalities and divisions that exist
in society and airs her concerns in her books. Through the
intervention of a cat that goes back and forth between them and a son
who needs a father, Valentin and Hélène are brought
together...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.