Film Review
Many years before he became associated, both as a director and producer,
with cinema-packing blockbusters such as
Jean de Florette (1986) and
Germinal (1993). Claude Berri began
his film career scripting and directing intimate, low-key dramas that now
seem to be the antithesis of the Berri brand.
Le Vieil homme et l'enfant
(1966), an arresting depiction of a developing relationship between a young
Jewish boy and a racist old man, was Berri's first notable success, although
it wasn't until his early collaborations with the comedy giant Coluche in
the early 1980s -
Le Maître
d'école (1981) and
Tchao
Pantin (1983) - that he acquired his almost unerring knack for turning
out popular hits.
Un moment d'égarement is an atypical Claude Berri offering,
a slow-paced drama revolving around three characters thrashing about in an
overheated cauldron of illicit passion, crushing guilt and a simmering desire
for revenge. With the help of a thoughtful but hardly distinguished
screenplay, the leads Jean-Pierre Marielle and Victor Lanoux turn in sensitive,
well-judged performances which transform a fairly humdrum drama into something
a little more meaningful and memorable. Making her cinematic debut
is a stunning 16-year-old Agnès Soral, who would go on to have a high
profile career as an actress.
To his credit, Berri avoids the blatant showiness of his subsequent, grander
films, and adopts a more restrained style of mise-en-scène that
is much better calculated to get the most from his talented triumvirate of
lead actors. Marielle turns in a particularly creditable performance
as an angst-ridden man visibly tormented by his moment of madness with his
best friend's seductively nubile daughter. The film doesn't quite do
justice to its subject - occasionally the drama is let down by its lethargic
pacing and some wearisome banalities on the writing front, but it is attractively
shot and engages the emotions somewhat more honestly than does much of Berri's
subsequent work.
Un moment d'égarement was capably remade a few years later
in America as
Blame it on Rio (1984), directed by Stanley Donen and
starring Michael Caine and Joseph Bologna. 2015 saw a
second, less
satisfactory, remake (with the same title as the original), produced by Berri's
son Thomas Langmann. This was directed by Jean-François Richet
and featured Vincent Cassel and François Cluzet in the principal roles.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Berri film:
Je vous aime (1980)
Film Synopsis
Pierre and Victor have been the closest of friends since childhood.
Now in their mid-forties, both men are separated from their wives and have
teenage daughters, Martine and Françoise. Aged 17, the latter
agree to accompany their fathers on their customary summer holiday in the
south of France. Pierre's attempts to rebuild his life after his divorce
continue to bring him into conflict with his daughter. At the same
time, he becomes Françoise's closest confidante, not realising that
he risks being the object of a teenage crush. One evening, Pierre attends
a wedding party in the company of Françoise. They have too much
to drink and they end up swimming naked in the sea together. Before
they know it, they are making love on the beach.
The next day, Pierre can scarcely take in what he has done. His attempts
to convince Françoise that their amorous fling was merely a moment
of madness, never to be repeated, falls on totally deaf ears. She is
convinced that he is the great love of her life and continues to hassle him,
threatening to betray him to her father if he dares to call an end to their
relationship. Pierre is placed in a terrible quandary when Jacques
tells him that his daughter has admitted to sleeping with a much older man.
Burning with paternal indignation, Jacques intends discovering the identity
of the supposed lothario and in this he enlists his friend's help.
Pierre knows that it is only a question of time before Jacques uncovers the
truth of his betrayal...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.