Film Review
In
Un enfant de toi (a.k.a.
Me, You and Us), Jacques Doillon
revisits two of his favourite themes - the eternal triangle and the
adult world viewed from a child's perspective - and weaves these into
an engaging drama that allows the director to play to his strengths,
unravelling the tangled intricacies of human relationships with
precision and poetry as only a committed auteur can. Regrettably,
on this occasion Doillon neglects his audience a little and ends up
delivering a film that is overlong, repetitive and too self-conscious
to be entirely satisfying. Whilst the film has some good points -
an excellent cast and an astute, meticulously crafted screenplay - it
is too self-consciously theatrical and languorous to have much appeal beyond
Doillon's hardcore fan base. Even those who are admirers of the
director's work have to admit that this is pretty small beer compared
with his past achievements.
On the plus side, the film is extremely well-cast, with the lead female
role comfortably inhabited by Doillon's multi-talented daughter Lou
(like her mother Jane Birkin, she is now enjoying success both as an
actress and a singer). Malik Zidi and Samuel Benchetrit are a
surprising but effective choice for the two lead male roles, the more
introspective, moodier Zidi making an effective contrast with the more
outgoing, self-satisfied Benchetrit. Whilst he is hardly an
established actor, Benchetrit has already made a name for himself as a
director, with such offbeat films as
Janis et John (2003) and
J'ai toujours rêvé
d'être un gangster (2008). Zidi does occasionally
outshine his two co-stars (he is, after all, the more experienced and
gifted actor, by some margin), but Lou Doillon and Benchetrit prove
their worth in some exquisitely tender scenes, although their efforts
are undermined by the sheer volume of verbiage they have to cope
with. The film is as much of an endurance test for them as it is
for the audience.
And then we come to the real star of the film, nine-year-old Olga
Milshtein, a born scene stealer who immediately grabs our attention
when she appears on screen as Lou Doillon's sweet little
daughter. If there is one area where Doillon is unsurpassed it is
in his direction of children, evidence by his captivating child's eye
drama
Ponette
(1996). Once again, Doillon gets the most out of a talented child
actor and makes her the focus of his film, the prism through which the
adult comedy of manners is given a suitably wry slant.
Milshtein's character may be a blithe seven-year old, but she has a
maturity and directness that the adults patently lack, and like her we
look at their antics with increasing bewilderment and dismay. The
one thing that redeems
Un
enfant de toi and makes it worth the effort
is Olga Milshtein's heart-warming naturalistic presence,
which never lets us forget how wise and perceptive young children are compared with us
know-it-all adults.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Jacques Doillon film:
Rodin (2017)
Film Synopsis
Aya and Victor have been together for several years and enjoy a happy
life with seven-year-old Lina, Aya's daughter from a previous
relationship with another man, Louis. Aya has made up her mind to
have another child but cannot decide whether the father should be
Victor or Louis, whose acquaintance she has recently renewed some time
after their painful separation. As Aya hesitates between her two
lovers, one a responsible, hard-working dentist, the other an arrested
adolescent, she is reminded of her former passion for Louis...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.