Film Review
For her seventh directorial outing Nicole Garcia makes a few tentative
steps into what is, for her, unfamiliar territory: social
realism. So far in her directing career, Garcia has mainly
concerned herself with the educated bourgeois class to which she
belongs, turning out some respectable and occasionally first-rate
dramas along the way.
Un beau
dimanche (
Going Away)
is a brave attempt to venture into the precarious, unstable lives of
those who, through choice or necessity, live on the margins of
society. The central protagonists are atypical Garcia characters,
one a compulsive drifter with a dark secret, the other an insecure
single mum menaced by debt collectors. The problem is that there
characters appear as archetypal on screen as they do on paper, and
therein lies the film's main flaw: Garcia doesn't seem to
understand these people or have any real empathy with them. It is
hard to engage with such cardboard stereotypes and our interest in them
evaporates long before the film reaches its painfully contrived
denouement.
To be fair, the script is the only thing that lets down this
film. In almost every other respect,
Un beau dimanche is an
accomplished, hard-to-fault piece of cinema. Garcia's
mise-en-scène has an artistry that you would expect of a mature
auteur, superior to anything found in her previous films. The
impression that she and her talented cinematographer Pierre Milon
create is a constant sense that there is something nasty beneath the
surface, an inner darkness that is belied by the sun-drenched visuals
which suggest the exact opposite. This strange contradiction
between what we see with our eyes and what we feel lends the film an
aura of mystery and understated menace which Garcia manages to sustain
up until the film's midpoint, where the narrative suddenly begins to
unravel. The awkward way in which Garcia attempts to articulate
her social concerns, resorting to the most risible forms of caricature,
only dents the film's credibility in its second half, reducing what
could have passed for a well-meaning attempt at social commentary to a
pretty infantile piece of bourgeois intellectual posturing, high-minded
but insincere.
Given the poor quality of the script it is remarkable that the two
leads manage to hold our attention at all. Pierre Rochefort (the
son of Garcia and actor Jean Rochefort) has a captivating presence as
the enigmatic protagonist Baptiste, and the fact that he survives the
poisoned chalice given to him by his mother augurs well for his
subsequent career. Former TV weathergirl Louise Bourgoin also
manages to make something of her hackneyed character, although the
script's multiple failings ultimately prevent her from giving an
entirely convincing performance. Whilst it is certainly a treat
to see Dominique Sanda back on the screen your heart can only sink to
see her reduced to playing a comicbook matriarch, in the part of the
film that is just a few steps away from looks like a Chabrol-directed
pantomime. What starts as a reasonable stab at a social realist
romantic drama ends as a hideously contrived fairytale and if the film
wasn't so handsomely crafted it would be easy to write it off as a
total misfire. If
Un beau
dimanche reveals anything about its director and her fellow screenwriter
Jacques Fieschi it is that they appear to have
some difficulty comprehending the lives of those outside their own
experience. There's something in that old saying that an author
should stick to what he or she knows best. Still, we should at
least give Nicole Garcia some credit for trying to break out of her
comfort zone - only by making mistakes does one achieve true greatness.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Nicole Garcia film:
Mal de pierres (2016)
Film Synopsis
Baptiste is a loner. A teacher in the south of France, he has
never occupied a single post for more than one term. One weekend,
he finds himself in charge of Mathias, one of his pupils, who has been
left behind by his neglectful father. Mathias takes Baptiste to
see his mother, Sandra, an attractive woman who, after numerous
escapades, now works on the beach near to Montpellier. The three
people get on well together and soon begin to resemble a family.
But it doesn't last long. Owing money, Sandra is forced to take
flight yet again. To help her, Baptiste must face his past and
confront a painful secret...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.