Film Review
A mischievous riposte to Peter Mayle's
A Year in Provence, Gemma Bovery started out as a
comic strip in the British newspaper The Guardian, written by Posy
Simmonds and intended as a satire on the English craze for living in
France
. The tragicomic
spoof of Gustave Flaubert's
Madame
Bovary was then published as a graphic novel in 1999 before
finding its way onto the big screen in this entertaining but pretty
hollow adaptation by acclaimed French film director Anne
Fontaine. Making her French film debut as the lead heroine
is the stunning English actress Gemma Arterton, who had previously
starred in another screen adaptation of Simmonds' work,
Tamara Drewe (2010), directed by
Stephen Frears.
It is Arterton's hyper-sensual presence that gives Fontaine's film its
characteristically Gallic eroticism but, strangely, her character is
under-developed and feels almost incidental rather than central to the
plot. In Flaubert's novel, the characterisation of Emma Bovary is
left unfinished, allowing the spectator to project whatever face he
chooses onto the fatally flawed heroine, but in Fontaine's film she is
hardly there at all, just an object of fascination for the men who fall
under her spell. Fontaine is far more concerned with the baker
Martin Joubert, played by a strangely incongruous Fabrice Luchini, who
is as convincing as a provincial boulanger as Liz Taylor would be as a
one-legged cockney bag lady.
In what is alarmingly close to being an exact rerun of François
Ozon's
Dans la maison (2012), Luchini
once again plays a man disillusioned with his profession who seeks
escape in voyeuristic fantasies. Luchini's overpowering charisma
makes it hard for him not to be the centre of attention, but by
allowing him to steal so much of the focus Fontaine completely alters
the thrust and tone of Simmonds' story, to the extent that it ends up
as verbose, stuttering farce centred around the male libido instead of
a well-observed satire on the middle-class English obsession with all
things French.
Fontaine scripted the film with Pascal Bonitzer, whose own films as a
director have a tendency to be on the over-wordy side, often to the
detriment of the plot.
Gemma
Bovery is positively awash with superfluous dialogue and, with a
less interesting and committed cast, would almost certainly have been a
Grade-A yawn-a-thon. Elsa Zylberstein, Edith Scob and Niels
Schneider (whose Flaubert counterpart is readily discerned) all provide
a welcome antidote to Luchini's stifling presence and help to prevent
this from ending up as a one-man show. By over-simplifying
Simmonds' nuanced satire and radically shifting its focus, what
Fontaine ends up delivering is a kind of
Flaubert for Dummies, a crude but
superficially likeable comedy-drama that does to a great work of French
literature pretty much what the American military did to two Japanese
cities in 1945, albeit with a little more panache and a somewhat lower
body count.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Anne Fontaine film:
Les Innocentes (2016)
Film Synopsis
Martin Joubert has given up his job with a Parisian publishing firm and
now runs a thriving bakery in the Normandy village where he grew
up. His passion for great works of literature helps him to get
through the mundanity of his present life. Imagine then his
excitement when an English couple, Gemma and Charles Bovery, take up
residence in the house across the street. Not only do these
new arrivals have names that evoke Flaubert's most famous characters,
they also appear to behave like them. Soon Martin's imagination is
going into overdrive, but the attractive Gemma Bovery has never read
Flaubert's book and wants only to live her own life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.