Film Review
François Ozon is a filmmaker who is frustratingly hard to pin
down. Over the past decade, he has made eight full-length
films and has earned considerable acclaim, yet it is devilishly hard to
know how best to characterise his work. What is there to connect
Sitcom
(1998), an anti-bourgeois sex comedy (with a giant man-eating rat),
with
5x2
(2004), a cruel, Bergmanesque dissecton of a marriage?
Ozon's latest film,
Angel (a
rose-scented costume melodrama that owes something to Mills & Boon)
does nothing for those hoping to discern some pattern to the director's
oeuvre. Like the Scarlet Pimpernel, François Ozon is
strangely reluctant to reveal himself and remains French cinema's
greatest enigma.
Angel is Ozon's most atypical
film to date. It is the director's first film to be
recorded in English, with an entirely British cast, and also his first
literary adaptation. The film is based on the 1957 novel of the
same title by the English writer Elizabeth Taylor (1912-1975), who
fashioned the main protagonist on Marie Corelli (1855-1924), a writer
of trashy romantic fiction that was highly popular in her time (Queen
Victoria being one of her most ardent readers - some people are so easily amused). Although the
story is set in Edwardian England, the film's vivid style is an obvious
homage to the lush Hollywood melodramas of the 1950s, employing a rich
palette and flamboyant mise en scène to show us the world as
Angel chooses to see it, as a vulgar colour-saturated fairytale.
It is not evident that the homage is respectfully intended, since
several scenes in the film veer towards outright parody.
The one thing that connects
Angel
with Ozon's previous films is its unflattering portrayal of
women. Ozon rarely, if ever, presents women in a positive or
realistic light, and Angel gives us his most unsympathetic female
character yet, in the guise of the instantly dislikeable Angel
Deverell. The main failing of the film is that Ozon never allows
the audience to sympathise with Angel. She is deluded and crass
to the point of caricature and is really little more than a shallow
parody of today's nauseating here-today-gone-tomorrow talentless
celebrity. There is a smattering of pathos in the closing scenes,
when Angel's attempt to live the life of a fairytale princess turns
horribly sour, but this comes too late and the tragic outcome feels
like a well-deserved retribution dished out to her by the gods of good
taste and decency. Not only does Ozon fail to do justice to
Taylor's deliciously ironic novel but he fails to deliver anything more than a
cumbersome melodrama that is so kitsch it will burn your retina.
© James Travers 2010
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Next François Ozon film:
Ricky (2009)
Film Synopsis
England, 1905. The daughter of a poor shopkeeper, Angel Deverell
refuses to accept her humble place in society. Determined to rise
to better things, she embarks on a literary career and starts to churn
out shallow melodramatic romances which she considers to be
masterpieces of literary art. Thanks to her publisher, Theo, and
a marked lack of discrimination in the book-buying public, her novels
prove to be an immense success. Within no time at all the
fortunate Miss Deverell has wealth, social standing and a dream
home. She also discovers love, in the form of avant-garde artist
Esmé, and her happiness is complete. But
surely such success cannot endure...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.