Film Review
Just what was producer Thomas Langmann thinking? Inviting
Jean-Francois Richet to direct a remake of his father's Lolita-themed
comedy-drama
Un moment d'égarement
(1977) sounds like an act of supreme folly, and the film he ended up
having to push into cinemas merely lives up to these
expectations. Claude Berri's original film (not his greatest,
admittedly) was daring for its time in its depiction of an overtly
sexual relationship between a teenage girl and a middle-aged man (the
best friend of her father). Whereas Berri's film fitted the mores
if its time and earned praise for its honest treatment of a problematic
subject, Richet's vacuous remake is both ridiculously coy and
lamentably unconvincing. In fact the only value Richet's film
serves is to show how much more subtle and ambitious Berri's film was,
and also how much better was Stanley Donen's American remake,
Blame it on Rio (1984).
Jean-Francois Richet is by no means a bad director. He deserves
the acclaim that came his way for his last film, the hugely successful
thriller diptych
Mesrine (2008). But to
follow such a spectacular film with a lowkey remake whose
raison d'être is pretty well
non-existent was as much a mistake on his part as it was on
Langmann's. Replacing Jean-Pierre Marielle and Victor
Lanoux in the original film are
Mesrine
star Vincent Cassel and
Intouchables hero
François Cluzet, both totally wasted in roles that are a pale
shadow of those in Berri's film. Miscast though they are, Cassel
and Cluzet at least make an effort to try and make the film work, which
is more than can be said for their younger co-stars Lola Le Lann and
Alice Isaaz, whose apparent lack of acting ability (aggravated by some
risible teenage stereotyping in the script) kills the film's
credibility stone dead within twenty minutes. Other than some
pretty photography of the island of Corsica, the film's artistic
content is nil.
The differences between this and Claude Berri's
Un moment d'égarement are
hardly subtle, but they are revealing of a worrying shift in mainstream
cinema over the past forty years. In Berri's film, the liaison
between the teenager (who actually
looks
like a teenager) and the older man (Marielle at his
roué best) is carried on
beyond the titular 'moment of madness', with both characters actively
driving the affair, and the film ends with the two embarking on what
might be a long-term relationship. In Richet's inferior remake,
the affair is totally one-sided, with the older man (Cassel) lured into
having sex by a predatory teenager and then doing his damnedest to
ensure the incident never repeats itself.
There is no sense of closure at the end of Richet's film - what happens
next is left to the viewer's imagination. It is hard to know
whether the departures from Berri's film are simply down to grubby
commercial reality (the riskier the subject matter, the more scathing
the reviews, and the less money it will make) or a reflection of how
the acceptance of overt sexuality has shifted down the age profile, so
that sexual aggressiveness in teenage girls is now considered far more
acceptable than in middle-aged men. In either case, the fact
remains that Richet's remake is an absolute stinker, no more than a
worthless echo of Berri's gently provocative and far more meaningful
film.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Laurent and Antoine are two men in their fifties who have been friends since
childhood. Divorced, they agree to take a summer excursion together,
in the company of their feisty teenage daughters - Marie and Louna respectively.
Despite the thirty year age gap between them, Louna finds herself strongly
attracted to her father's friend and she seduces him on the beach one evening.
Laurent thinks nothing of this amorous fling - for him, it is just a moment
of madness, soon forgotten. But for Louana it is something far more
serious - the start of what she hopes will be a passionate love affair.
Naturally, Antoine is both stunned and infuriated when his daughter confides
in him that she has had a liaison with a man of his age. In fact, his
one thought is to find the ageing Lothario and teach him a lesson he will
not forget in a hurry. Laurent now finds himself in the most intolerable
of positions. He feels he ought to come clean and tell his friend that
he was the rogue who deflowered his precious daughter, but his innate sense
of self-preservation prevents him from doing so. In his present state,
there is no knowing what Antoine will do when he finds the vile specimen
of humanity who has dared to rob his daughter of her innocence...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.