Film Review
Catherine Deneuve goes deliriously A.W.O.L. in this patchy but
good-natured road movie, the latest flimsy auteur offering from
actress-turned director Emmanuelle Bercot. It was with her gently
provocative coming-of-age dramas
La
Puce (1999) and
Clément
(2001) that Bercot found her voice as a filmmaker and her latest film
is a coming-of-age drama of an altogether different kind, one in which
an implausibly spry sixty-something (Deneuve) regains her zest for
living and rediscovers herself - a plot which may conceivably reflect
the real-life aspirations of an actress looking for new mountains to
climb in the autumn of her career. The scenario is hardly
original and Bercot does appear to be somewhat cliché-prone, but
Deneuve's enchanting presence and ballsy performance compensate for
most of the film's shortcomings so that
Elle s'en va, whilst being far from
perfect, makes for an entertaining rehash of some familiar themes.
The film impresses most in its first half, where the sexagenarian
heroine does her 'Alice in Wonderland' bit, abandoning her cosy
middleclass world and entering a strange, unfamiliar land (i.e. rural
Brittany) inhabited by rustic yokels that look like a job lot from a
Pier Paolo Pasolini film. Bercot's decision to cast
non-professional actors for the country bumpkin roles smacks of corny
self-indulgence and the resulting 'authenticity' that is achieved is
more of the kind you would expect to find in a sham documentary rather
than anything you would encounter in real life. It is Deneueve
who, surprisingly, prevents it all from going horribly awry, as she
seems to establish a genuine rapport with everyone she
encounters. There's little trace of the old ice princess here -
this is Deneueve at her most human and likeable.
After this promising beginning things begin to go badly wrong towards
the middle of the film, when the heroine is roped into taking care of
her estranged daughter's unruly offspring (played
by the son of the director and her cinematographer Guillaume
Schiffman). This is where the clichés begin to accumulate
at a staggering rate and the narrative switches from scenic but bumpy
country lanes to smooth but predictable urban highways. The
carefree spontaneity of the film's first half (a woman in search of
meaning in her life) gives way to something far more conventional (a
family reconciliation) and it is at this point that it begins to lose
its charm. Bercot's penchant for provocation surfaces in a few
scenes but it doesn't stick around long enough to have anything like
the impact it did on her earlier films.
Elle s'en va is a light and breezy
entertainment which gives Catherine Deneuve the chance to broaden her
repertoire but, overlong, uneven and awash with clichés, it
isn't as comfortable a ride as it might have been.
Bercot would have more success with her next film,
La Tête haute (2015),
a more conventional coming-of-age piece.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Emmanuelle Bercot film:
La Tête haute (2015)
Film Synopsis
In her sixties, Bettie is suddenly confronted with two disasters -
being suddenly abandoned by her lover and the impending financial ruin
of the family restaurant she runs. What is she to do with her
life? One day, she gets into her car, planning to take a short
drive around the block to mull things over. But she stays at the
wheel and is soon miles from home, with no intention of heading back
soon. Bettie's impromptu flight leads to a series of unexpected
encounters and incidents: a party attended by a former Miss France, a
chance to re-establish contact with her daughter, the discovery of her
grandson, and maybe even a fresh chance of love at the end of her
journey. A whole new future suddenly opens up before...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.