Jean de La Fontaine - Le défi (2007) Directed by Daniel Vigne
Biography / Drama / History
Film Review
A few months after the release of Molière (2007), the life
of another celebrated French writer comes under the spotlight in Jean de La Fontaine - Le défi.
Directed by Daniel Vigne, who is still best known for Le Retour de Martin Guerre
(1982), the film attempts to shed some light on the life and character
of a writer about whom surprisingly little is known.
Although it has a fine cast and some exemplary production values (the
sets and costumes are stunning), the film is a bland, plodding affair
and, lacking in focus, character depth and narrative coherence, soon
becomes a tad tedious. Vigne's
direction also lacks the inspired touch of his previous work, although the
film's real attention killers are its lacklustre photography and
flaccid screenplay, which fails to offer anything more than a
superficial and hackneyed portrayal of the central character and
the period he inhabits. Jean de La Fontaine - Le défi
is a film that promises much but delivers frustratingly little,
other than to reawaken your interest in a great French writer.
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Film Synopsis
5th September 1661 is an important date in the history of France, since this
was the day on which Nicolas Fouquet, the Superintendent of Finances and
most powerful of the king's advisors, was arrested on the orders of the state
councillor Jean-Baptiste Colbert, with the result that the young Louis XIV
became the sole governor of his kingdom. As other artists line
up to glorify their royal patron and champion the divine right of the king,
the poet Jean de La Fontaine abstains and merely voices his support for the
ousted Fouquet. Colbert is incensed and resolves to bring the rebellious
poet to heel. But from that day, La Fontaine would remain true to his
convictions. Penniless and reviled, he resists Colbert's taunts and
occupies himself by writing his famous fables and scathing pamphlets against
what he knows to be a despotic and decadent government...
It was American film noir and pulp fiction that kick-started the craze for thrillers in 1950s France and made it one of the most popular and enduring genres.