Film Review
For his third feature after
Neuilly
sa mère (2009) and
SMS
(2014) director Gabriel Julien-Laferriere seizes the mood of the moment with
this ebullient comedy centred around the composite family, an arrangement
that is sadly becoming the norm in an era where marriage and longterm relationships
are now a rarity.
C'est quoi cette famille?! has a great deal
of fun with the now well-worn idea of reversing adult-child roles but it
struggles to make an original statement of its own. It is depressingly samey, caricatured,
clichéd and repetitive, so a reasonably good premise is wasted on
a second-rate script that serves up mostly puerile gags that are more likely
to appeal to young children than grown adults.
Judging from his work to date, Julien-Laferriere seems to be better suited
for the small screen than the big screen, and indeed he has divided his time
fairly evenly been cinema and television (working on TV popular shows such
as
Fais pas ci, fais pas ça).
C'est quoi cette famille?!
has the unmistakable small-scale TV movie-feel to it that prevents it from
making it an effective piece of cinema entertainment. A respectable
cast of established adult actors (including Julie Gayet, Julie Depardieu
and Lucien Jean-Baptiste) are put to shame by the younger cast members, who
manage to appear far more convincing and arouse far more sympathy.
Although mildly entertaining,
C'est quoi cette famille?! doesn't
quite gel - it suffers badly from a lack of original ideas, some pretty uninspired
direction and an ending that feels horribly forced.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Bastien is a 13-year-old boy who, thanks to his mother's inability to settle
down with one man, finds himself with eight parents and six siblings.
As a result, Bastien and his many brothers and sisters are constantly being
shuffled between their parents' various households, an arrangement they have
begun to resent An opportunity for the children to get their
own back on their selfish parents presents itself when Bastien's eccentric
grandmother Aurore goes off on holiday, leaving her apartment empty for a
few weeks. The unhappy brood claim possession of the flat and refuse
to be moved. If their parents want to see them they can visit if they
wish - but at their own risk...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.