Ville à vendre (1992)
Directed by Jean-Pierre Mocky

Comedy / Thriller

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Ville a vendre (1992)
Jean-Pierre Mocky assembles a remarkable cast (which reads like a potted Who's Who of French cinema circa 1990) for his most virulent swipe at the kind of shady wholesale collusion of big business and governments that had become endemic in France (and most other countries) by the late 1980s.  A habitual self-plagiarist, Mocky has no qualms over plundering some of his earlier successes - notably La Grande frousse (1964) and Agent trouble (1987) - and revisits a scenario that will be familiar to all aficionados of The Wicker Man (1973) and the off-the-wall BBC TV series The League of Gentlemen (1999-2002).   A stranger (here aptly named Orphée) attempts to inveigle his way into a close-knit ensemble of grotesques (seemingly a job lot of rejects from the Hammer House of Horror) and is driven to unearth the sinister secret that lies at the badly decomposed heart of the community.  It's not a film for the squeamish, nor for those who have a phobia of seriously bad hairstyles.

Mocky's penchant for black comedy (noted for its in-your-face vulgarity and total lack of political correctness) and some wonderfully eccentric performances from an exceptional cast (comedienne par excellence Jacqueline Maillan is superb in her last film appearance) make up for a rambling plot which struggles to hold our interest much beyond the film's wobbly midpoint.  Ville à vendre is not Mocky's most subtle or most polished film but its blunt caricature is not so far wide of the mark and, twenty years on, the film appears chillingly prophetic.  Admittedly, the vast majority of the jokes are stale and predictable but Mocky's mocking portrayal of a town in a state of terminal decline, kept alive like a dying vampire with an intravenous feed of a highly dubious kind, provides a powerfully disturbing metaphor for where the industrialised countries of the West may be heading as their economic power and prosperity ebb slowly away towards the rest of the developing world - the zombification of a civilisation that has run its course but is too stubborn to lie down and die.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Pierre Mocky film:
Bonsoir (1994)

Film Synopsis

Moussin is a small derelict town in the industrial east of France where eight out of ten people are unemployed.  Whilst the town appears to be in a state of irreversible decline with virtually every house up for sale, the mood of the local population is upbeat, thanks to generous allowances handed out by the town's mayor.   All is well until a prominent figure of the community, the pharmacist Delphine Martinet, dies in suspicious circumstances at a fête, shortly after hinting that she has some secrets to reveal.  Martinet's death intrigues an outsider, Orphée, who, not content with the official version of events, is prompted to carry out his own investigation.  In doing so he uncovers a dark and terrible secret.  But as the bodies pile up around him, will he ever live to tell the tale...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits


Kafka's tortuous trial of love
sb-img-0
Franz Kafka's letters to his fiancée Felice Bauer not only reveal a soul in torment; they also give us a harrowing self-portrait of a man appalled by his own existence.
The very best of Italian cinema
sb-img-23
Fellini, Visconti, Antonioni, De Sica, Pasolini... who can resist the intoxicating charm of Italian cinema?
The best French films of 2019
sb-img-28
Our round-up of the best French films released in 2019.
The very best fantasy films in French cinema
sb-img-30
Whilst the horror genre is under-represented in French cinema, there are still a fair number of weird and wonderful forays into the realms of fantasy.
The best of Russian cinema
sb-img-24
There's far more to Russian movies than the monumental works of Sergei Eisenstein - the wondrous films of Andrei Tarkovsky for one.
 

Other things to look at


Copyright © filmsdefrance.com 1998-2024
All rights reserved



All content on this page is protected by copyright