Film Review
Tatie Danielle was director Étienne Chatiliez's impressive
follow-up to his smash hit debut feature
La Vie est un long
fleuve tranquille (1988), a similar kind of off-the-wall black comedy
with a razor-sharp satirical edge. The film proved to be another critical
and popular success, attracting an audience of 2.1 million in France and
picking up nominations at the 1991 Césars for three of its lead actresses
- Tsilla Chelton, Catherine Jacob and Isabelle Nanty. Whereas
Chatiliez occupied himself by poking fun at the class divide in modern day
France in his first film, for his second he turns his attention to an even
starker social gulf, the one separating the pre- and post-war generations.
In this he is ably assisted by a formidable doyenne of the French stage,
Tsilla Chelton, whose film appearances up until this time had been
pretty scant, consisting of minor roles in films such as Yves Robert's
Alexandre le bienheureux
(1967) and Diane Kurys's
Diabolo menthe
(1977).
Chelton's compelling portrayal of the aged relative-from-Hell, Auntie Danielle,
provides the heart and soul of Chatiliez's film, as well as the bulk of the
exceedingly dark humour. In spite of the monstrous cruelty she inflicts
on all around her, the character never fails to win our sympathy. Whilst
the situation may be exaggerated for the purposes of entertainment, the film
does touch on some real life concerns about how our present society treats
its older citizens, and how growing old is regarded by a society that is
increasingly obsessed with youth and beauty. In earlier centuries,
solitary old women would tend to be burnt as witches. These days, we
are far more civilised. We just close our eyes and pretend they don't
exist.
The pairing of Isabelle Nanty (Sandrine) with Tsilla Chelton (Danielle) is
the film's most inspired touch, the two actresses sparking off each other
in a way that lends humour and poignancy in abundance to a bleak satire that
could so easily have gone awry. The evident chemistry between Chelton
and Nanty allows a genuine rapport to develop between their two ill-matched
characters, and this is how the film manages to drive home one of its central
messages, that sugary sentimentality is no substitute for true human feeling.
Aunt Danielle is, we soon realise, a tragic character who is more sad than
bad; her actions being mostly a reaction to the rejection and isolation she
has experienced since the death of her husband. Sandrine is her exact
counterpart, but from a different generation. They recognise
in each other their own malaise and soon find that they have what it takes
to salve each other's wounds. Of course, for anyone looking on at a
distance, all this appears highly comical, so we can't help laughing.
But it is laughter tinged with sadness, for it soon dawns on us that Tatie
Danielle may be the future that awaits each one of us.
© James Travers 2024
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Étienne Chatiliez film:
Le Bonheur est dans le pré (1995)
Film Synopsis
Danielle Billard is an 82-year-old who isn't quite what she seems.
Anyone seeing her for the first time would think she is such a nice old lady,
kind and considerate, the sort that wouldn't hurt a fly. But this isn't
what she's really like. Oh, no. Danielle Billard is the most
vicious and despicable person you can imagine, a thieving, lying, deceitful,
vindictive and thoroughly nasty harridan of the worst kind. She delights
in tormenting her housekeeper Odile, making her life Hell with her endless
mischief-making. When Odile dies suddenly, Danielle is at a loss.
Whose life can she make miserable now, she wonders. As luck would have
it, she has a kind-hearted grandnephew Jean-Pierre who, knowing nothing for
her true temperament, invites her to live with him and his family at their
nice home in Paris.
Since he and his wife Catherine are both orphans, Jean-Pierre couldn't be
happier to have the old relative in his life as a substitute grandmother,
but it isn't long before he realises his mistake. Madame Billard has
barely settled into her new abode before she starts making the lives of her
benefactors a living Hell. Jean-Pierre and Catherine soon realise they
need to get away and are soon heading off to Greece for a badly needed holiday.
Needless-to-say, Tatie Danielle is outraged at being abandoned in this way.
Fortunately, her relatives have taken the initiative to provide her with
an au pair, Sandrine, to look after her and keep her out of mischief.
Prompted by Sandrine's well-meaning attempts to befriend the old woman, Danielle's
demonic side is about to unleash itself far more spectacularly than even
she could have imagined...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.