Film Review
Advertising is a dirty word, possibly the dirtiest word in the English
language. If there is one aspect of modern life that deserves to
be satirised to death it is that self-serving industry that is
dedicated exclusively to coercing us into buying things we don't need
and which does very little to enhance our quality of life.
Frédéric Beigbeder, a one-time ad man, had a bestselling
hit in France with his novel 99 F (later re-issued as 14,99
euros), a book that viciously ripped the skin off the carcass of a vile
industry to expose the putrefying offal that lay within. In
his vibrant film adaptation, director Jan Kounen manages to capture
much of the pungent irony, dark humour and anti-consumerist subtext of
Beigbeder's novel, although he is perhaps so preoccupied with making a
strong visual statement that some of the message gets lost in migration
from page to screen.
Jan Kounen's particular talent as a filmmaker - as demonstrated in his
previous films
Dobermann (1997) and
Blueberry (2004) - is in creating a
distinctive visual impact. He is less effective when it comes to constructing
a coherent narrative, something which has prevented him from achieving
the level of recognition he perhaps deserves outside France.
99 francs has the same failing, but
this is less of a problem as the film is not telling a story but rather
offering a long-overdue piece of social commentary, humorously
attacking an industry that has much to answer for and which has, to
coin a phrase, long passed its sell-by date.
99 francs could very easily
have ended up as a rather tasteless anti-capitalist rant. What
prevents this from happening and keeps the audience hooked from start
to finish is the presence of Jean Dujardin, an actor of rare talent and
great comic potential who brings a touch of humanity to the proceedings. Here, Dujardin performs the minor miracle
of making us feel sorry for over-paid advertising executives, those
smug narcissistic boils on the posterior of society whom we allow to
empty our back accounts so that we can live the dream they want us to
live. Dujardin has pretty well cornered the market when it comes
to playing odious rogues that we just cannot help falling in love
with. He tugged our heartstrings like a dying puppy as the
spoiled beach brat in
Brice de Nice
(2005) and almost managed to make old-fashioned male chauvinism look
respectable in
OSS 117: Le Caire nid d'espions
(2006). As the self-satisfied, self-christened King of the
Universe Octave Parango, Dujardin pulls of his greatest coup to date
and convinces us that even ad men have a soul, buried somewhere in that
skyscraping mountain of ego.
Although the viewing experience is somewhat soured by some
self-indulgent artiness and a few futile digressions into vulgarity,
the film still manages to get across its message (which is basically
that advertising is a social evil) whilst delivering an almost
continuous stream of laugh-out-loud gags. Imaginatively directed
by Jan Kounen (easily his best film to date), and with Jean Dujardin
doing his comedic utmost to persuade us that an ad man's lot is not a
happy one,
99 francs is
well-worth its titular price-tag. But why not wait until the
January sales, when you might be able to get this one and another film
of your choice at half the recommended retail price
(subject to
availability, restrictions apply)!
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Octave Parango is a high-powered advertising consultant who prides
himself on the knowledge that he decides what people will want to buy
and how they will live their lives. He is more powerful than the
President of the United States! Working for Ross &
Witchcraft, the world's largest advertising agency, Octave's life is a
riot of hedonistic excess punctuated by moments of creative
genius. But an ill-fated love affair shatters his complacency and
he begins to realise how superficial and unfulfilling his career
is. The last straw comes when his ideas for marketing a brand of
yoghurt are over-ridden by his client, who insists on a more banal ad
campaign. After a colleague of his commits suicide, Octave
decides to have his revenge - by giving dairy products the image they
really deserve...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.