Biography: life and films
Jérôme Bonnell has directed just ten films since his first feature
in 2002 but already he has established himself as one of France's most respected
auteur filmmakers - and he is only barely into middle age. His remarkably
astute slices of life impress not only with how perceptively they depict
human relationships, but also with the sensitivity that lends them so much
immediacy and warmth. Like Truffaut, Bonnell appears fascinated by
the complexities and contradictions of relationships and has chosen to make
this the essence of his cinema, which is fundamentally about the need
that human beings have to relate to others and thereby discover their own
true identity.
Born in Paris, France, on 14th December 1977, Jérôme Bonnell
set his sights on a career in the film business early on in life. He
studied cinema at the University of Paris VIII and began his directing career
with a short film,
Fidèle (1999), which marked the beginning
of his long and fruitful collaboration with the actress Nathalie Boutefeu.
After directing a few more shorts, Bonnell graduated to features with
Le Chignon d'Olga (2002),
which he made at the age of 23. Already in this charming first film,
a tender comedy-drama about a family getting over a painful bereavement,
the director reveals himself to a budding auteur of immense charm and sensitivity.
This he followed with
Les Yeux
clairs (2005), a more unusual drama about a young woman (Nathalie
Boutefeu) who is desperate to find someone she can relate to and ends up
in a relationship with a man whose language she cannot speak. This
film won the Prix Jean-Vigo in 2005 and established Bonnell's reputation
as a young filmmaker to watch out for.
Jérôme Bonnell certainly didn't disappoint with his next film,
J'attends quelqu'un
(2007), an enchanting patchwork-quilt of a film depicting several disparate
individuals all desperately hoping to find someone to release them from their
pit of loneliness. With a cast comprising such talented performers
as Jean-Pierre Darroussin, Emmanuelle Devos and Eric Caravaca, this third
feature from Bonnell could hardly fail to please. With his next film,
the director made an unexpected move onto much darker territory, with his
first thriller,
La Dame de trèfle
(2010). Although gloomier than Bonnell's previous films, it is still
just as perceptive in its portrayal of basic human needs and in some ways
it oddly resembles Jean Cocteau's
Les Enfants terribles, showing us
the perfect world of a brother and sister (Malik Zidi and Florence Loiret-Caill)
that is brutally torn asunder by two unwelcome interlopers (Darroussin and
Marc Barbé).
In 2013, now having just reached middle-age, Bonnell was well-equipped to
deal with the subject of mid-life crisis in his next film,
Le Temps de l'aventure
(2013), which depicts a fraught and delicate autumnal romance between a seemingly
ill-matched couple, played to perfection by Emmanuelle Devos and Gabriel
Byrne. There's a distinctly lighter - even flippant - feel to Bonnell's
next film,
À trois on y
va (2015), a boisterous
ménage-à-trois comedy
with Anaïs Demoustier, Félix Moati and Sophie Verbeeck playing
a young threesome keen to experiment with a three-way romance. Although
the critics were not as kind to this film as they had been to the director's
earlier work, it makes a pleasant excursion into farce and shows that, far
from being complacent and sticking only to what he does best, Bonnell now
has enough confidence in his abilities to try something different - and long
may he continue to do so.
© James Travers 2017
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