Film Review
Tout le plaisir est pour moi
is the kind of film that only a woman would
dare to make.
Films which tackle female sexuality head-on without collapsing into a fetid heap of trite clichés
are few and far between, which makes Isabelle Broué's
debut feature, a taboo-busting comedy, more interesting than it perhaps merits.
Some will no doubt find the film tacky and vulgar, but Broué's
sympathetic treatment of her subject gives it some charm and
appeal.
On the plus side, the film is very well cast, particularly the
leads. Marie Gillain and Julien Boisselier are two very likeable
and able performers who are perfectly suited for this kind of light
comedy-drama which has a serious underbelly.
Gillain succeeds in making her slightly obnoxious egoistical character sympathetic,
although Boisselier's portrayal is more convincing. There are
also some great contributions from the supporting cast, particularly
Brigitte Roüan and Tsilla Chelton (finally rehabiliated after
her role in Étienne Chatiliez's
Tatie Danielle (1990)).
The film offers one or two good jokes, but unfortunately much of the
humour is of the kind that would make the owner of a Parisian brothel
blush, and the worse the jokes are, the more often they are
repeated. It's a film that manages to be both mildly entertaining
and mildly offensive, and you can never be quite sure whether you like
it or loathe it. It is also mildly depressing, since it depicts a
world in which the most important thing is the mindless pursuit of
pleasure, and the real basis of human relationships - a little thing
called love - is somewhat devalued, if not overlooked altogether.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Louise is an independent modern woman who knows what she wants and
knows how to get it. She has a job she enjoys and a boyfriend,
François, who satisfies her other feminine needs. Then,
one day, some mean spirited Celestial agent throws a spanner into the
workings of the well-oiled machine that is her life.
François no longer manages to arouse her in bed.
Disaster! Convinced she has lost her clitoris, Louise visits a
sex specialist, a sex shop and an African spiritualist, in an
increasingly desperate attempt to regain that essential part of her
femininity...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.