Film Review
After two intense and involving dramas -
L'Homme qui rit (2012) and
Marie Heurtin (2014) - French
writer-director Jean-Pierre Ameris returns to somewhat lighter
territory for his latest film
Une
famille à louer, a feel-good rom-com in the vein of his
previous chocolate-coated comedy
Les Émotifs anonymes
(2010). Ameris again cast the star of this earlier film,
the omnipresent Benoît Poelvoorde, in the male lead role, in what
is little more than a gauche but amiable reworking of
Pretty Woman, with Virginie Efira
playing the archetypal hard-up single mum to Poelvoorde's archetypal
depressive bachelor businessman, with predictably sparky results.
With two such charismatic and yet strikingly different lead actors,
Ameris had the option of making this a seriously funny culture clash
comedy, but perversely he plays it safe and opts for a
middle-of-the-road romantic comedy where the humour (if you can detect
it at all) is of the distinctly low-key and predictable variety.
Une famille à louer is all
pretty formulaic and second-hand, but the director gives it the
personal touch by garnishing his forced social comedy with the
saccharine fairytale trimmings of his previous comic outing. The
result is a sweet, albeit a tad mechanical, little fable that engages
at a superficial level without making a particularly deep
impression.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Paul-André is a shy and introverted forty-year-old. He has
money but he is bored beyond belief and ends up concluding that what he
needs most in the world is a family. His dream looks as if it
might be about to come true when he comes into contact with Violette, a
lively forty-something who is facing eviction and the possibility of
losing custody of her two children. Convinced that money can buy
him anything, even a family, Paul-André offers to hire Violette
and her children by settling all of her debts. It's an
arrangement that suits the distressed mother, but just how long will it
last...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.