Film Review
Inspired by the decision of his friend Jacques Brel to exchange fame
and fortune in Europe for the tranquillity of the Marquesas Islands,
director Claude Lelouch had little difficulty selling the idea of
Itinéraire d'un enfant gaté
to actor Jean-Paul Belmondo. At the time, Belmondo had
forsaken cinema to resume his career in the theatre, starring in Robert
Hossein's hugely successful stage production of
Kean. The actor saw a great
deal of himself in the character of Sam Lion and agreed not only to
star in the film but also to co-produce it with Lelouch. He had
previously worked with the director on the popular comedy romance
Un homme qui me plaît
(1969). Although Belmondo would appear in a further nine films,
including Lelouch's ambitious
Les Misérables (1995),
he would never again give a screen performance of this quality, nor
would cinema audiences take to him as they once did in his glory
days. This was his last great moment of triumph.
The Belmondo that is revealed to us in
Itinéraire d'un enfant gaté
is a very different creature to the one that we had seen previously in
his loveable tough-guy
policier
roles. Whilst he again gets to play a larger than life character
(a latter-day Charles Foster Kane with a touch of the Reggie Perrins),
Belmondo gives a performance that is far richer, much more measured and
poignant than he was known for at the time. On paper, his
character is barely credible (no attempt is made to explain just why
Sam is driven to turn his back on his business and his family), but
Belmondo's portrayal is so convincing and engaging that we are
compelled, instinctively, to feel that we understand Sam's need for
escape. For what is surely one of his finest performances,
Belmondo was rewarded with a César in the Best Actor category,
even though he previously stated he did not want the award and refused
to collect it (possibly because of a personal antipathy for the
trophy's designer César Baldaccini, a contemporary of his
father, the sculptor Paul Belmondo). The film won a second
César for its music, composed by Lelouch's long time associate
Francis Lai.
Trivia
fans should note that Belmondo's own son, Paul, appears briefly in the
film, playing his character as a young man.
Itinéraire d'un enfant
gaté is one of Claude Lelouch's most charming films, but
that doesn't mean that it isn't spared the director's slightly
irritating tendency for superficial characterisation and penchant for
laughably grandiose mise-en-scène. Whilst there are a few
moments (particularly towards the end) when the gushing sentimentality
is a little hard to stomach, the film overall has far more substance
and emotional realism than most of Lelouch's films, and this is largely
down to the quality of the performances from the two male leads,
Belmondo and his talented co-star Richard Anconina, who have an
extraordinary rapport. There is something magical about
Belmondo and Anconina's two-handed scenes in this film, which were
partly improvised and as a result have an authenticity which brings
depth and humanity to both of their characters. Such a shame that
Lelouch couldn't coax comparable performances from the rest of his
cast.
Itinéraire d'un
enfant gaté is not a great film - its soap-style
excesses and lack of substance are major failings that are only just
redeemed by a few smatterings of brilliance and an outstanding central
performance from Jean-Paul Belmondo.
© James Travers 2003
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Next Claude Lelouch film:
Les Misérables (1995)
Film Synopsis
Sam Lion has led a full and successful life. As a young boy, abandoned by
his mother, he was adopted by a circus family, where he developed an afinity for big cats.
His career as a circus acrobat was cut short by an accident, after which he started a
new life in commerce. His revolutionary cleaning products made him a wealthy man,
the head of a corporate empire, but his private life was just as eventful. He marred
young, had two children, his first wife died tragically, and he re-married. Now
in his fifties, Sam has only one wish - to escape. Whilst crossing the ocean in
a one-man dinghy, he decides to fake his own death. With a new identity, he travels
the world before settling in an African game reserve. Here, he encounters Al Duvivier,
one of his former employees. Recognising Sam, Al tells him that since his presumed
death his company has run into financial difficulties. Sam decides it is time to
return to France but, unable to resume his previous life, he uses Al as a go-between to
settle the problems of both his company and his daughter Victoria. The deception
works for a while...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.