Film Review
After her promising debut feature
Jusqu'à
toi (2009), director Jennifer Devoldère offers up a
second helping of downbeat comedy-melodrama. although this one cannot
help feeling like reheated leftovers from American sitcoms. This
time, Devoldère tackles the thorny subject of the
father-daughter relationship, and leaves no cliché unturned in
her efforts to extract a laugh and a tear from the more susceptible
members of her audience.
Et
soudain tout le monde me manque is unlikely to win any awards
for originality, and is so obviously made for the small screen you
wonder why Devoldère bothered with a theatrical release, but it
does have a certain charm and sliver of authenticity, thanks mainly to
the engaging central performances from Michel Blanc and Mélanie
Laurent.
Blanc needs no introduction and is an obvious casting choice for the
part of the slightly neurotic father who is suffering from what appears
to be a delayed mid-life crisis. His presence salvages what
really is little more than a third rate comedy searching desperately
for an original idea and brings a badly needed jolt of realism to
deflect our attention from the banal subject matter and barrage of
misfired gags. Mélanie Laurent is far less at ease in her
role (that of the grown-up daughter who seems to be in a permanent
state of adolescent rebellion) but works surprisingly well with Blanc
and helps to create the illusion that the film has more backbone that
is in fact the case.
Et
soudain tout le monde me manque is one of those anodyne comedies
that offers a fairly satisfactory alternative to a dull evening of
mindless télé-zapping but, like an uneventful one-night
stand, it will have all but faded from your mind by the
morning, leaving only a faint sense of embarrassment.
Don't be deceived by the title; this is not a film you will miss in a hurry.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Family life can be very complicated, especially when you are sixty and
your new wife is about to give birth to your third child. This is
the predicament that Eli finds himself in. Just how is he to
break the news to his two grown-up daughters, Dom and Justine?
Eli has always found it difficult to get on with Justine, so he
conceives a plan to show how much he cares for her - a plan that is
doomed to fail...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.