Film Review
In 2002, the actress Karine Silla Pérez collaborated on the screenplay
of her husband Vincent Perez's directorial debut feature
Peau d'ange. A decade on,
Perez repays the compliment by playing one of the principal roles in her
own debut feature as a director,
Un baiser papillon. Whatever
else the film may lack it certainly isn't high class acting talent.
The cast boasts a remarkable ensemble that includes Elsa Zylberstein, Cécile
De France, Jalil Lespert, Edith Scob, Firmine Richard, Serge Hazanavicius
and (in an all-too-brief cameo appearance) Gérard Depardieu.
Unfortunately, this deluge of star power is just about all the film has
going for it. What could have been an honest and thoughtful reflection
on love, life and death ends up looking like an extremely bad imitation of
a Claude Lelouch film (imagine
Toute
une vie inter-spliced with
Les Uns et les autres).
With no discernible discipline or originality on the writing front, and even
less ability being shown in the direction,
Un baiser papillon ends
up as a horribly disjointed ensemble piece that is so inundated with clichés,
caricature and tow-curling platitudes that there's scarcely a moment when
it rings true.
The film's glossy presentation (too pretty to be real) and glossy cast (ditto,
by at least a factor of ten) cannot disguise the staggering vacuity of the
mass of poorly developed interlocking storylines that fail to coalesce into
anything resembling an interesting and engaging narrative. There are
just too many characters, too many stories, too much patronising waffle and
too little substance to make
Un baiser papillon worth the effort to
sit through. As the film reminds us, life is just too short.
Imagine if you can a series of excerpts snipped from a glossy television
soap opera and carelessly jumbled together with no artistry whatsoever.
This is what the film resembles, only worse.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Billie is a settled forty year old who is devoted to her husband Louis.
She is happily married with two children and life couldn't be better for her.
Then comes the terrible day when she discovers to her horror that she has
a life-threatening cancer. She had hoped to find some words of comfort
from her friend Marie, but she has problems of her own. A well-known
actress, Marie's only desire is to start a family, but this appears to be
one gift that nature intends to keep from her. Fortunately, Alice,
the nurse who takes care of Billie during her treatment, appears to have
all the right answers to life's problems...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.