Film Review
If director Benjamin Rocher's motivation for making
Antigang was to revitalise the
French policier he chose a funny way to go about doing it. The
film admits to being a remake of Nick Love's far from successful
The Sweeney (2012) (which was
itself inspired by a popular television series of the 1970s) but it
looks more like a fan's over-enthusiastic homage to the
Lethal Weapon and
Die Hard movies of the 1980s.
In fact, there's nothing remotely French about the film - it's about as
American as a film can be without actually being made in America by an
all-American crew. Yes, the film is set in Paris, but it's not a
Paris that anybody who has ever visited the French capital will
recognise - it's a synthetic copy of the kind that belongs to a
computer game, in which the police behave like gun-toting fascists and
robbers are indestructible murdering psychopaths better organised than
the American military. To lighten the mood amidst all this
mindless mayhem and mutilation, our affable law enforcers are never
short of a quip or two. If there's any Gallic sophistication in
this film, it is very well hidden.
Antigang is a massive step
down from the two films that Rocher co-directed prior to this, two
fairly respectable horror films which
did
have the effect of breathing life into a well-worn genre, namely the
zombie movie:
La Horde (2009)
and
Goal of the Dead
(2014). For his first solo offering, Rocher is content to
slavishly imitate his American counterparts, copying the style of the
movies he clearly adulates whilst totally overlooking the very thing
that made them so successful, namely a convincing and constantly
surprising lead actor. Instead, we have a somewhat
long-in-the-tooth Jean Reno struggling to make anything of his
formulaic, two-dimensional character, much as
he had done on previous over-blown thrillers
such as Mathieu Kassovitz's
Les Rivières pourpres (2000).
There's a nice rapport between Reno and his co-star Alban Lenoir
(the impressive lead in Diastème's
Un Français (2015)),
but neither of their characters is sufficiently well-developed to make them much more than
violence-addicted one-line merchants. Occasionally, some of the
gags hit home, but most go wide of the mark and generally the film's
attempts at humour backfire as badly as someone breaking wind in a
crowded lift.
The thinnest of plots (lifted entirely from the aforementioned
Sweeney movie) serves as a barely
adequate backbone for a film that is really nothing more than a cobbled
together compendium of ultra-violent action scenes delivered with more
élan than logic. Some of these work well - the film's
highpoint is a spectacular chase through the Bibliothèque
Nationale - others just look like random splurges of violence for its
own sake. To his credit, Rocher does attempt to manoeuvre the
film onto more adult territory in the second half as Reno's character
is forced to take a long hard look at himself, but a jarring mismatch
soon develops between the more serious and continuing infantile strands
of the film. Without much in the way of plot or character depth
to sustain it,
Antigang ultimately
ends up as nothing more than a poor man's copy of a kind of over-egged
action-thriller that went out of fashion years ago.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Serge Buren is a cop of some renown, working with a team of younger
police officers whose methods are, to say the least, somewhat
unconventional. What does it matter that they dispense with
procedure and take a creative approach to law enforcement, if they get
the desired results without breaking too many heads? But now
Buren and his team face a much greater challenge, in the form of a gang
of murderous robbers that is raiding the capital's banks and jewellers
using combat methods. Is Buren's team equipped to take on such a
violent adversary or do they need to change their methods...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.