Film Review
When it was first published in 1973, Joseph Joffo's autobiographical novel
recounting his childhood experiences in Nazi occupied France was an instant
bestseller.
Un sac de billes was translated into 18 languages
and sold over twenty million copies. Two years after the book's publication,
independent filmmaker Jacques Doillon turned it into an exemplary film drama
which remains one of cinema's most authentic and most poignant depictions
of childhood. Now, forty years on, we have another version, an over-sentimentalised
childish melodrama that is so drenched in syrupy sentimentality that you
almost resent Joffo having written the novel in the first place. Coming
not long after Yann Samuell's disappointing
La Guerre des boutons,
this latest hideously dumbed-down version of another French movie classic
confirms a worrying trend in French cinema - that mainstream films are getting
slushier and slushier.
We owe this latest cinematic aberration to the Canadian filmmaker Christian
Duguay, whose previous films - the equestrian drama
Jappeloup (2013) and boy-and-his-dog
escapade
Belle et Sébastien, l'aventure continue (2015) - show
a comparable lack of good taste and serve up the same sickly diet of puerile
saccharine sweetness that requires us to shed a tear at least once every
five minutes. In the hands of someone less susceptible to egregious
tear-jerking than Duguay this 2017 version of
Un sac de billes could
have been a surefire winner. It has an impressive cast and the production
values are incredible, offering a remarkably authentic reconstruction of
the period in which the story is set. But the film's grotesquely unsubtle
attempts at manipulating our emotions merely convince us that it is targeted
exclusively at incredibly dim and habitually weepy seven-year-olds. Duguay's
over-deliberate direction exacerbates the flaws in a hopelesly shallow and
cliché-sodden script, making the film virtually indigestible for an
adult audience.
With a starry cast headed by Patrick Bruel and Elsa Zylberstein the film
certainly has what it takes to attract a mainstream audience on the acting
front, and it is fair to say that the performances are the one thing the
film does have going for it, although sadly this is not enough to save this
well-stuffed turkey. Both the adult leads are convincing as two Jewish
parents desperately concerned for the plight of their family, but they are
effortlessly eclipsed by the totally engaging lead child performers Dorian
Le Clech and Batyste Fleurial, whose captivating presence is sufficient to
prevent the film from being a complete write-off. Other prominent actors
- notably Bernard Campan and Christian Clavier - are wasted in minor roles
that are nothing more than hideous caricatures, of the kind that (yet again)
try to convince us that under Nazi Occupation France was entirely divided
into self-sacrificing saints and collaborating scum, with no areas of grey
in-between.
Furnished with a massive budget, a remarkable story of endurance and a formidable
cast, it is amazing how badly this version of
Un sac de billes has
turned out. With an excessive, heartstring-yanking score that becomes
unbearably nauseous within ten minutes, this deluge of sentimental pap has
hardly a fraction of the searing emotional power of Doillon's far more understated
film and is only recommended for those who are so chronically addicted to
tacky, low-grade schmaltz that they cannot wait for it to show up in the
primetime Sunday evening schedule on TF1, which is the natural place for
this kind of vacuous crowdpleasing slush.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
France, 1941. With their country now under Nazi Occupation, two Jewish
parents, Roman and Anna Joffo, the owners of a hairdressing salon in Paris,
become concerned for the safety of their family. They decide to relocate
to the unoccupied south of the country, and to reduce the likelihood of them
being captured, they send their two sons Maurice and Joseph to Nice ahead
of them. After their father has drilled into them the need to keep
their Jewish identity a secret at all times, the brothers begin their long
journey southwards. For the boys who are barely into adolescence, it is a
great adventure and they enjoy the freedom it offers them. But ahead
of them lie numerous hazards and many potential enemies. Fortunately,
there are also kindlier folk who are willing to help them on their way...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.