Film Review
After his gruesomely macabre thriller
Le Pacte du silence (2003),
director Graham Guit takes us off into an entirely different realm of
the imagination, once more aided and abetted by living legend
Gérard Depardieu. Here, Depardieu is partnered with Fanny
Ardant with whom he had previously worked on François Truffaut's
dark romantic drama
La Femme d'à côté
(1981) and Anne Fontaine's quirkily erotic piece
Nathalie... (2003). As
on those occasions, the two actors work together incredibly well,
but their sparkling rapport is just about all the film has
going for it. Both actors are ill-served by a pretty atrocious script - a cliché-sodden mess that
tries a little too hard to extort laughs from its audience.
Things get off to a bad start when a bourgeois couple decide to swap
their chic Paris apartment for a dismal squat in the less salubrious area of
Tel-Aviv, apparently with the intention of getting in
touch with their long neglected Jewish roots. Even if
you are willing to swallow this crazy, half-baked premise, your credulity will then be
tested to destruction by the crass mare's nest of implausibilities what follow.
When male circumcision becomes not only the object of some pretty grim humour but an entire
plot digression you know that something is seriously wrong somewhere.
Imagination is as lacking as good taste. The only reason to watch this travesty is to become reacquainted with Fanny
Ardant's flair for comedy, which deserves to be exploited more than it
has been to date. In just every other department,
Hello, Goodbye is a total
misfire.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Alain and Gisèle Gaash are a happily married couple who, now into
their fifties, lead a comfortable existence in Paris. Well-paid
professionals, life could not be better for them but, somehow,
Gisèle is not satisfied with her lot.
On the spur of the moment, she makes up her mind to up-sticks and
settle in Israel, to rediscover her Jewish roots. Alain eventually gives
in to this seemingly mad whim but once the couple have arrived in Israel they find it is anything but the
Promised Land...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.