Film Review
You can only admire Claude Lelouch's audacity. When
Hommes, femmes, mode d'emploi
was made, its co-star, Bernard
Tapie, was at the heart of a storm of contraversy in France. The former head of
Marseilles soccer team and previously holding a French government post, Tapie was rarely
out of the limelight in the French media in the early and mid 1990s.
Shortly after the film was released he was tried for financial irregularities and sent to prison.
That Lelouch should brave the storm and cast his old friend in his film is testamant to
the director's courage or obstinacy! And what a remarkable piece of casting it is.
I cannot think of any actor who could have carried off the part half as well as Tapie,
and the recent history of the man adds more than a tinge of spice and colour to the character.
The film's other star, Fabrice Luchini, is also on fine form. The cultivated
comedic actor (who is more easily imagined in Eric Rohmer's gentle comedies
such as
Les Nuits de la pleine lune (1984)
than cruder fare from Claude Lelouch) is a perfect foil for Tapie's down-to-earth worldly confidence.
The scenes where the two men are discussing philosophy, with Luchini become increasingly
amazed at Tapie's apparent profundity, are deliciously funny.
One possible fault of the film is that, in order to justify its title, its scope was widened
a bit too much. If it had focused on the lives of the two main protagonists, the
policeman and the business man, the film would perhaps have had greater cohesion, and
would probably have been more successful. Unfortunately, the main plot drags in
other elements, such as the street singer who ends up as a concert performer, and the
silly, but fun, sub-plot where a teenage boy and girl meet on a train, lose contact, and
then go to extraordinary lengths to find each other again. As a result, the
film ia little over-long and the sophistication of the Tapie-Luchini comedy is watered
down by the comic-book escapades which happen in the various sub-plots. Still,
it provides a pleasing dose of madness after Lelouch's previous and more gruelling wartime epic,
Les Misérables (1995).
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Claude Lelouch film:
Hasards ou coïncidences (1998)
Film Synopsis
Fabio Lino is an ex-actor who finds he can put his acting skills to better use in his
current job as a policeman. Benoit Blanc is a successful business man who has more
than an eye for the ladies. Both men meet up after a visit to their doctor and find
they have the same health problem. Their doctor turns out to be one of Benoit's
earlier conquests, many years ago when she was a very young woman. Determined to
get some revenge on her ex-lover, the young doctor swaps the results of her two patients'
examinations. She informs Fabio that he is fit and well and Benoit that he has only
a very small chance of survival. The news radically affects the lives and fortunes
of both men...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.