Film Review
With
Casse-tête chinois
(a.k.a.
Chinese Puzzle)
Cédric Klapisch (hopefully) concludes a trilogy depicting the
globe-trotting exploits of his alter ego Xavier Rousseau, a writer on a
perpetual quest for fulfilment in his career and love life. After
L'Auberge Espagnole (2002) and
Les Poupées russes
(2005), this latest Klapisch flight of fancy is distinctly lacking in
depth and originality and feels like a tawdry compendium of ideas
lifted from American rom-coms of the last twenty years, clumsily
cobbled together with a snowstorm of digital effects which soon become
distracting and tedious. Whilst there is some pleasure to be had
in seeing Xavier reunited with his old college chums again (for what
will almost certainly be the last time), the film soon outstays its
welcome and is little more than an embarrassing accumulation of second-hand
story ideas and lazy clichés. Spotting from which films
Klapisch 'borrowed' his plot ideas is about the sum total of the film's
entertainment value.
For a director who began his career with such promise, creating a name
for himself with such vibrant auteur pieces as
Le Péril jeune (1994)
and
Chacun cherche son chat (1996),
Klapisch has taken a spectacular plunge into mediocrity recently, and
Casse-tête chinois, his most
derivative film so far, merely hastens this descent. The setting
(New York), the plot, the characters - everything about the film is
clichéd to Hell, and whilst we once warmed to the gauche
egocentricity of Xavier and his friends, now that they have reached
middle-age and are as immature as ever we can scarcely help but despise
them. Wendy has turned into a gold-digging opportunist with an
exceedingly poor taste in men. Isabelle has become the ultimate
lesbian cliché, doing all the things that clichéd
lesbians do, and Xavier is still the irritating, self-loving,
self-promoting narcissist he always was.
Not only is Klapisch incapable of creating interesting new characters,
he appears singularly incapable of developing his existing
characters. It is this that is the most damning failure of
Casse-tête chinois - the fact
that not one of the colourful individuals we first met in
L'Auberge Espagnole has grown
up. Life's hardships seem to have passed every one of them by and
left them as immature, shallow and self-absorbed as ever, just as
Klapisch himself has failed to develop and seems forever fated to live
off his early success. Like Norma Desmond, he appears stuck in a
self-made mausoleum, basking in past glories and totally oblivious to
the fact that the world outside has moved on. Will we ever again
see the Klapisch we once loved and admired? Only when Xavier and
company are dead and buried.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Cédric Klapisch film:
Ce qui nous lie (2017)
Film Synopsis
Now that he has reached the grand old age of 40, Xavier finds that his
life is getting more and more complicated. The father of two
children, his mania for travel has taken him to New York, Chinatown to
be precise. In the midst of a happy confusion, Xavier
struggles to find his way in the world, not an easy task when so much
is going on around him. A conventional, well-organised life is
something he can only dream of...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.