Film Review
Serge Bozon is not the kind of film director who goes out of his way to
attract a large audience. In fact, judging by his work to date,
he seems to be going to extraordinary lengths to distance himself from
the mainstream and set himself up as the kind of critic-friendly auteur
that audiences love to hate, or at least feel justified in
ignoring. Six years after he triggered a tsunami of consternation
with his WWI musical
La France (2007), Bozon is back
with an even stranger concoction of ill-fitting genres, a deranged
union of film noir, murder mystery and black comedy that makes cinema
feel like an extreme sport.
Tip
Top is one of those idiosyncratic digressions into virgin
weirdness that you will either love or hate, and even if you hated
Bozon's earlier films, there's still a chance that you may warm to this
charmless oddity. Like David Lynch, Bozon has a knack of skewing
the banal and making it appear scarily familiar.
Tip Top is adapted from a pulp
fiction crime novel of the same title by the British author Bill
James. It was scripted by Bozon and Odile Barski in collaboration
with Axelle Ropert, the co-author of Bozon's previous three films who
has recently embarked on her own directing career with
La Famille Wolberg
(2009). Thanks to Bozon's flair for inverting normality, what
could have been a fairly routine policier ended up as something far
less predictable, a totally off-the-wall comedy that not only pokes fun
at the inadequacies of the French police but also offers a bitter
commentary on France's unendingly problematic relationship with
Algeria. The plot is just about the least important element of
the film, which is just as well given that it is pretty well
incomprehensible and was probably never intended to make sense.
The facile story of two senior cops investigating the death of an
informer is just the pretext for a scathing satire
sans frontières, one that
risked an outright ban through its attempt to personify the whole of
France's police system as three psychotic individuals who have each
elevated their private perversions to a fine art, all for the social
good.
First off there is the grotesque double act formed by Isabelle Huppert
and Sandrine Kiberlain, two of France's great acting talents who
clearly have no qualms over playing the most extreme parodies of their
familiar screen personas. Huppert is the cold schoolmistress type
who looks on pain (both given and received) as an essential part of
human experience. Having spent the day beating people up in the
course of her professional duties, she spends a happy evening indulging
in a connubial punch-up with her devoted husband (Samy Naceri, no
stranger to police maltreatment). Kiberlain, by contrast, is
about as terrifying as an agoraphobic deer, although her aptitude for
unnerving people just by staring at them with her doe-like eyes makes
her a more than capable police officer. The downside is that,
being pathologically fearful of physical contact, she has a far less
adventurous love life than Huppert and has to take what pleasure she
can as a solitary voyeur. Luckily, she has a more than obliging
across-the-road neighbour to help her make an honest woman of herself.
To this scary duo, an accidental tribute act to the Marquis de Sade and
Peeping Tom, we must add François Damiens, a completely
self-unaware poseur who manages to freak people out just by trying to
be nice to them. Damiens' attempts to ingratiate himself with the
immigrant community (a not-too-subtle allusion to France's past efforts
to remain on good terms with the people of Algeria) are hideous to
watch and end up appearing more offensive than a tirade of xenophobic
invective. Here we have modern policing in a nutshell - the
thug, the watcher and the hand-holding weirdo. It's hard to know
which member of this terrible trinity is the scariest, although nothing
disconcerts more than the sight of Huppert sticking out her tongue,
like some uglier species of reptile, to catch blood dribbling from a
cut on her nose. It's an image that is repeated far too often,
knotting your stomach every time it hits your retina, and, barring the
merciful release brought by a degenerative brain disorder, it will most
likely stick in your head until you die. Watching Huppert,
Kiberlain and Damiens eat is also a pretty unnerving experience - even
George Romero's flesh-eating zombies showed better dining
etiquette. For those who like their socially conscious comedies
pungent, unpredictable and mildly repellent,
Tip Top definitely hits the spot,
although, like all good things when taken to excess, it may make you sick.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After an informer of Algerian origin is killed in Villeneuve, a
nondescript little town in northern France, two senior police officers,
Esther Lafarge and Sally Marinelli, are sent to investigate.
Right from the start, Esther and Sally fail to hit it off with Robert
Mendès, the detective who was the dead man's police contact and
whose cack-handed attempts to build bridges with the town's immigrant
community are as subtle as they are effective. Esther's addiction
to casual violence not only assists in her day job, it also adds spice
to her love life, although the cuts and grazes she sustains in her
off-duty hours are apt to be misinterpreted. Sally, by contrast,
is a timid soul who, despite her admiration for Esther, has an aversion
to any kind of physical contact. Rather than get into a fight,
she merely unnerves people by staring at them, and you'd never guess
she was a compulsive voyeur. With two such determined cops on the
case it is only a question of time before the killer is unmasked and
order can be resumed to the peaceful little town of Villeneuve, once a
few more litres of blood have been spilled...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.