Tout va bien, on s'en va (2000) Directed by Claude Mouriéras
Drama
aka: Everything's Fine, We're Leaving
Film Review
Claude Mouriéras' third film is a poignant work which examines the fragile relationship
been an estranged father and the three daughters he walked away from when they were young
girls. Guilt, resentment and pity come to the fore in the emotional fireworks which
flare up when the father attempts to re-enter his children's lives. An exceptional
cast gives a convincing portrayal of a traumatic situation which is becoming increasing
familiar in modern life, as an ever-growing number of families break up before the children
attain adulthood.
As the film illustrates, a whole host of factors can conspire to prevent parents and children
from being reconciled. For the parents, the overriding concern may be a sense of
guilt for the errors they made in rearing their children; for the children, it may be
a long-standing bitterness (conscious or sub-conscious) for the pain caused by these errors.
The relationship between parents and their grown-up children is inordinately complex,
and surprisingly few films have tackled this with as much insight and honesty as other
human relationships.
Whilst Claude Mouriéras' film is both moving and realistic (with a soupçon
of Gallic humour to lighten the tone), its artificial ending prevents it from being entirely
satisfying. In a sense, the film tries to do much - it attempts to tell the story
from too many points of view (the father and the three sisters), and really fails to do
justice to either perspective, with the result that the whole thing ends up feeling a
touch inconsequential. The main reason for watching the film is Michel Piccoli's
sensitive portrayal of a man suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer's disease.
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Film Synopsis
Three sisters living in Lyons find their lives disrupted when their father, Louis, re-appears
unexpectedly after an absence of 15 years. The two elder sisters, Laure and Béatrice,
both independent and strong-willed, resent the fact that their father abandoned them and
their mother. Claire, the youngest, an aspiring pianist, wants to forgive
her father, but by doing so she risks alienating herself from her elder sisters on whom
she is dependent. In the emotional tug-of-war that ensues, the sisters fail to see
that their father is losing his memory...
Cast:Michel Piccoli (Louis),
Natacha Régnier (Claire),
Miou-Miou (Laure),
Sandrine Kiberlain (Béatrice),
Laurent Poitrenaux (Nicolas),
Marcial Di Fonzo Bo (Frederico),
Caroline Pili (Marion),
Hubert Koundé (Arthur),
Dany Benedito (Dame event 2),
Marie Blanche (Maman jardin public),
Joseph Camara (Copain black),
Helena Chammas (Petite Béatrice),
Jacqueline Dorian (Dame pigeons),
Clémence Encislai (Petite Laure),
Maroussia Gentet (Petite Claire),
Valérie Gil (Infirmière),
Laurent Isquierdo (Cavalier petite Laure),
Maud Jabouley (Copine Marion),
Pierre-Louis Lanier (Vendeur),
Jessica Mauro (Copine Marion)
Country: France
Language: French
Support: Color
Runtime: 96 min
Aka:Everything's Fine, We're Leaving
The best French Films of the 1920s
In the 1920s French cinema was at its most varied and stylish - witness the achievements of Abel Gance, Marcel L'Herbier, Jean Epstein and Jacques Feyder.
From its birth in 1895, cinema has been an essential part of French culture. Now it is one of the most dynamic, versatile and important of the arts in France.