Film Review
By the time he came to direct
Tandem,
his eighth full-length film, director Patrice Leconte already had a
string of box office hits under his belt, mainstream comedies that
included
Les Bronzés (1978),
Viens chez moi, j'habite chez une copine
(1981) and
Les Spécialistes
(1985). Popular though his films were with the French
cinema-going public, Leconte had yet to find favour with the
critics.
Tandem was to
change all that, a far more adult kind of comedy that won its director
widespread critical acclaim and anticipated his subsequent great auteur
films, such as
Monsieur Hire (1989) and
Le Mari de la coiffeuse
(1990). The film was not only a critical and commercial success,
it was also nominated for six Césars in 1988, although it faced
stiff competition from Louis Malle's
Au revoir les enfants and
walked away with the most derisory of consolation prizes, an award for
its poster design.
For this distinctly Gallic conflation of traditional road movie and
buddy movie, Leconte cast one of the stars of his earlier
Bronzés hits, Gérard
Jugnot, alongside one of the giants of French cinema, Jean Rochefort,
who had previously starred in the director's badly received debut
feature,
Les Vécés
étaient fermés de l'intérieur (1976).
It is a chalk-and-cheese pairing that works far better than you might
expect, mainly because Jugnot foregoes his usual comedy histrionics and
turns in a far more measured and subtle performance. With the
lead actors looking uncannily like a 20th century equivalent of Don
Quixote and Sancho Panza, trundling up and down the highways and byways
of France like a pair of Trivial Pursuit samurai, it is tempting to
think that Terry Gilliam may have been inspired by this film to cast
Rochefort as Quixote in his aborted
The
Man Who Killed Don Quixote.
Rochefort's character was in fact based on Lucien Jeunesse, the host of
the long-running French radio game show
Le Jeu des 1000 francs from 1965 to
1995 (the show still airs on France Inter every weekday under the title
Le Jeu des 1000 euros).
Jeunesse dismissed Rochefort's portrayal as caricatured but it is in
fact a harrowingly true-to-life character study of a man for whom
celebrity has become the most destructive kind of drug. As Mortez
and his dogsbody assistant wend their way up and down France's
motorways, checking into dreary hotels in nondescript towns, we cannot
help but be struck and moved by the tragic emptiness of both their
lives. Derelicts in a world from which they appear permanently
estranged, the only thing they possess that is of any real value is
their grudging friendship - nothing else seems to matter. The
fame that Mortez enjoys is a hollow prize that exposes the aching void
that lies within the brittle shell of our precious celebrity culture.
With Leconte showing far greater restraint in both his writing and
direction than we might expect,
Tandem
has an understated elegance and sincerity that puts some of his
grander, more flamboyant films to shame. There are some humorous
asides along the way, but for once Leconte is happy to downplay the
humour and focus on character, allowing his two immensely talented lead
actors to take control and enrich the film with their nuanced and
engaging portrayals of two inordinately complex individuals. The
film does occasionally veer dangerously close towards pathos, but
whenever it does so we can always rely on Jugnot and Rochefort to
prevent it from tumbling into the abyss. Lacking the laboured,
self-conscious stylisation of Leconte's subsequent critical successes,
Tandem has a mix of authenticity
and lyrical simplicity that sets it apart. A hauntingly
melancholic study in solitude and the need for companionship, this is
assuredly one of the director's most accomplished and insightful works.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Patrice Leconte film:
Monsieur Hire (1989)
Film Synopsis
For the past 25 years, Michel Mortez has hosted the popular radio game
show
The Cat's Tongue.
Over that time, the show has become the most important thing in
Mortez's life and now, in the twilight of his career, he has neither
friends nor family. Mortez is a household name, but he is
contemptuous of his public and is increasingly intolerant of their
eccentricities. He would be completely alone were it not for his
obliging chauffeur, assistant and handyman Bernard Rivetot, who sticks
to him like a seal pup to its mother. It is a strange
relationship that the two men enjoy, part father and son, part master
and servant. Rivetot's principal duty is to feed his employer's
pride as they travel from town to town looking for willing contestants
for Mortez's legendary show. Then, one day, Bernard is horrified to
learn that the owners of the radio channel have decided to cancel his
master's programme. Anxious over how Mortez will react to this
news, he does all he can to conceal it from him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.