Film Review
After an unsuccessful but well-meaning attempt to branch out into the dramatic-thriller
genre with
Une autre vie (2014),
writer-director Emmanuel Mouret bounces back with the kind of film with
which he is far more comfortable - the talky rom-com which has earned
him the epithet of France's answer to Woody Allen. In the
same line as the director's earlier successes
Un baiser, s'il vous plaît!
(2007) and
Fais-moi plaisir! (2009),
Caprice serves up another fluffy
concoction of romantic confusion in which Mouret again plays the
socially inept goon with more women on his hands than he can deal
with. Not content with being married to a cinema goddess
(Virginie Efira at her most ravishing), Mouret allows his troublesome
libido to be tempted by a pushy romantic firecracker (a fearsome
Anaïs Demoustier) and ends up fighting his way out of a
predictable Woody Allen-esque muddle, looking like a poodle trying to swim the Atlantic
as he does so.
Ruining on-screen relationships is something that Anaïs Demoustier
is getting quite adept at, having achieved pretty much the same result
in another recent film - Jérôme Bonnell's
À
trois on y va (2015). Demoustier may not have Efira's
drop-dead good looks, but she has a woman's killer instinct when it
comes to bagging her man and Mouret is putty in her hands when she
directs her amorous intent in his direction, like a heat-seeking
missile homing in on its target. Looking more like Pierre Richard
with every film he appears in, Mouret hasn't a hope as his
uncomplicated love life suddenly turns into a mess of nightmarish
proportions, which isn't helped when his best friend starts sniffing
around Efira.
Caprice doesn't quite have the
Rohmer-esque sophistication of Mouret's previous comedies but it still
manages to be effortlessly entertaining, thanks to its author's
penchant for sharply witty dialogue and the robust comedy performances
from the leads. Perhaps more so than Bonnell's film, Mouret
sidesteps the conventions of the traditional
ménage-à-trois farce and rewards with a film which feels
true-to-life as well as deliriously funny in places. Theatrical
in its stylisation, Mouret's distinctive brand of cinema continues to
enchant and delight, and let's hope that he continues in this vein for
many years to come, French cinema's most adept disciple to the art of
burlesque marivaudage.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Clément, a maladroit schoolteacher, is obsessed with the film
star Alicia Bardery, so imagine his surprise, to say nothing of his
delight, when the object of his obsession succumbs to his charms and
says she is willing to be his partner for life. For several years
Clément leads an idyllic family life with Alicia, but then
another woman, Caprice, suddenly falls in love with him. The
impetuous and pushy Caprice could not be more different from Alicia,
and yet Clément finds himself attracted to her. Just as
Caprice begins to win her man over, Alicia's attentions are drawn
towards Clément's best friend, Thomas...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.