Film Review
Has it ever occurred to you that too many high-profile filmmakers these
days look like spoiled adolescents, so wrapped up in themselves, so
eager to lap up the praise that is heaped upon them by the media, that
they lose all contact with reality and end up making films that no one
in his right mind would ever want to watch? If so, then
take heart - this is exactly the image of today's celebrity film
director that Jonathan Zaccaï presents in his zany first feature,
a shoestring mockumentary cut from the same cloth (or a low budget
near-equivalent) as Rob Reiner's
This
is Spinal Tap (1984).
JC
comme Jésus-Christ offers up the appalling prospect of
Jean-Luc Godard reincarnated as a sulky teenager, a gangly prodigy who
has already won the Palme d'Or and a César but has yet to sit
his highschool exams. Zaccaï's film doesn't just poke
fun at celebrities and our obsession with celebrities, it is also a
pretty effective send-up of the fake-documentary genre, although you
probably have to be at least 95 per cent French and a rampant cinephile
to see the funny side.
For those who have kept in touch with French cinema recently,
Jonathan Zaccaï will no doubt be a familiar name - he has graced our cinema
screens over the past decade, playing an assortment of ambiguous,
shifty characters in such films as Jacques Audiard's
De battre mon coeur s'est
arrêté (2005), Anne Fontaine's
Entre ses mains (2005) and
Joachim Lafosse's
Élève libre
(2008). Having made two short films about five years ago,
Zaccaï has finally taken the plunge and fulfilled his life's
ambition by directing his own feature film. Judging by the
generally negative critical reaction to it, you can forgive him for
thinking he wished he had stuck with the day job. Imperfect as it
is, Zaccaï's debut feature was one of the most original
French films of 2012, and also one of the funniest (if, like me, you
have a totally warped sense of humour).
JC comme Jésus-Christ
gets off to a promising start with Claire Chazal (an occasional
presenter of the evening news on the main French TV channel TF1)
interviewing the subject of the film, the eponymous JC (which stands
for Jean-Christophe, not to be confused with that part-time
miracle worker who went on to found his
own religion). The expression of mild contempt and effete boredom
that settles on JC's face as Chazal fawns disgracefully all over him
sets like quick-drying cement and stays there for the duration of the
film. Clearly, JC is not someone we are expected to have any
sympathy for - he is exactly what you would get if you hybridise
Jean-Luc Godard and Woody Allen and substitute whatever charm there is
in this cinematic Wunderkind with an infusion of teenage strop at its most
virulent. JC may be a genius (although there's precious
little sign of it in what Zaccaï shows us of him) but he is not
someone you would want to invite round for dinner. He treats his
parents with the same air of suppressed loathing as his producers -
both get the big sulk treatment if they fail to hand him his favourite
breakfast cereal or the millions he needs to make his next cinematic
masterpiece. The caricature is pretty extreme, but not quite so
extreme that you can't help seeing one or two real-life counterparts to
the ghastly JC as he goes about showing he is God's gift to the moving
image.
Whilst the film manages to sustain its off-beat humour pretty well, and
is mercifully short enough not to outstay its welcome, it is pretty
evident that it lacks the muscle to be a really effective satire.
What should have been a vicious
Friday
the 13th-style carve-up of an industry that is ripe for
lampooning ends up as a somewhat toothless shark that is content with
tickling anorexic minnows. What comedy there is is mostly
self-referential and targeted at an exclusively French audience - it is
inconceivable that the film could ever play well aboard. Most of
the best jokes revolve around JC's misguided attempts to make an
uplifting musical comedy about the exploits of the Belgian child killer
Marc Dutroux (a news story that dominated the French headlines in the
mid-1990s). Gilles Lellouche and Kad Merad are two actors who are
worryingly eager to play the part of Dutroux, although the latter
insists on maintaining his anonymity (providing the film with its most
enjoyable series of gags). You have to be awfully familiar with
contemporary French culture and have a
very strange sense of humour to see
the funny side of this film.
JC comme Jésus-Christ also
suffers from being made in a hurry. Zaccaï completed the
screenplay in just over a month and managed to shoot the entire film
within two weeks, with another month set aside for post-production - an
astonishingly fast turn around. Whilst the film's rapid
production schedule benefits it in some respects, giving it a spontaneity
and jagged documentary feel that it might otherwise have lacked, it
cannot escape looking like a rushed job. If Zaccaï had spent
a little longer on the script, it might have been much punchier and
a far more substantial piece than it is.
On the casting side, the film is harder to fault. From the
outset, Zaccaï had Vincent Lacoste in mind for the part of JC and
there is probably no actor better suited to play a stroppy teen version
of Jean-Luc Godard. Lacoste has already distinguished himself in
quite a few films recently - notably Riad Sattouf's
Les Beaux gosses (2009) - and
Zaccaï's film does nothing to alter the impression that he has a
great career ahead of him. Will Jonathan Zaccaï
prove to be as successful as a film director? If the
mockumentary is a genre that appeals to you, there is much to like in
his off-the-wall first film, but Zaccaï needs to borrow some of
JC's misplaced self-confidence and creative anarchy if he is to make
the grade and convince us he can direct as well as he can act.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Jean-Christophe Kern, a.k.a. JC, is a filmmaking phenomenon. Aged
15, he was the youngest person ever to win the Palme d'Or at Cannes,
for his first film, which also took a César. Success
hasn't gone to his head, however. He may be the greatest film director in
the world, a cross-between Jean-Luc Godard and Justin Bieber, but he
still has to take his end of school exams like every other boy of
his age. JC may have a lot on his plate but somehow he finds the time
to prepare his next film,
which can hardly fail to be a masterpiece - a riotous musical comedy
about the serial killer Marc Dutroux...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.