Film Review
To date, the acclaimed screenwriter and one-time film critic Pascal
Bonitzer has found surprisingly little success as a director, despite a
promising start with his first two features
Encore (1996) and
Rien sur Robert (1999).
After the disappointing and frankly bizarre
Petites coupures (2003) comes
the even more lacklustre
Je pense
à vous, a pretty half-hearted attempt at a middle class
comedy of manners that, through want of originality, quickly
settles into a vacuous muddle that fails to coalesce into
anything of any real substance.
Even though the film boasts an impressive cast (Edouard Baer, Géraldine Pailhas
and Charles Berling make it a very tempting proposition and
their performances are far from disappointing), it is
singularly lacking in charm, conviction and narrative
thrust. The characters are little more than shallow bourgeois stereotypes, the jokes are
tired (and sometimes repeated
ad nauseum),
and the situations so familiar that you can practically hear yourself reciting the
dialogue before it's spoken.
Bonitzer is a supremely gifted screenwriter with a flair for observation
and characterisation that other directors (Jacques Rivette, Raoul Ruiz, André Téchiné)
have used to their advantage, but to date he has yet to make the
same impact as a director. He would show much more directorial
flair with his next film
Le Grand alibi (2008)
but he still has some way to go before he lives up to his promise as a filmmaker.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Pascal Bonitzer film:
Le Grand alibi (2008)
Film Synopsis
Parisian publisher Hermann is confronted with the mother of all dilemmas
when one of his most successful authors, Worms, writes a book in which he
describes, in intimate detail, a love affair that he once had with a woman
named Diane. Worms is too valuable a client to lose so Hermann knows
he has no choice but to go ahead and publish the lurid novel, even though
the Diane in question now lives with him and isn't likely to look kindly
on the writer's graphic account of their steamy liaison. Life is further
complicated for Hermann when, one morning, who should re-enter his life but
a former girlfriend of his, Anne. The compromising portrait of Hermann
in the embraces of another woman is captured on film by Worms, who duly sends
it on to Diane. The very night that Anne pays a house call on Hermann,
Diane is visiting Antoine, who happens to be Anne's former doctor and present
husband. What starts out as a promising comedy soon risks turning into
the grimmest of tragedies. When he wants it, Eros can be a nasty little
sadist...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.