Film Review
At first sight, there appears to be little to distinguish
La Famille Wolberg from the
plethora of films that humorously plot the decline of the familiar
dysfunctional family. In outline, the plot is as
clichéd as it is contrived: the husband, a patriarchal type with
an over-inflated sense of propriety, discovers his wife has been having
and affair, but refuses to tell her he has cancer so as not to ruin his
daughter's 18th birthday. How can a film that is apparently
a hotch-potch of well-worn archetypes possibly have a positive
impact? Yet it does, for this is a film that probes deeply
into the psychology of the family and proves to be much more insightful
and moving than you might at first expect. Far from being trite
and clichéd,
La Famille
Wolberg proves to be subtly subversive in its well-observed and
honest reflection of family life.
For her feature debut, director Axelle Ropert delivers a distinctive
piece of cinema that combines the bleak melancholy of Alain Tanner's
work with the enigmatic poetry of Eric Rohmer. Having introduced
all the clichés that we associate with a film of this kind,
Ropert cunningly turns them all on their head and, in doing so, reveals
some startling truths about the relationships between family
members. The love that a father has for his wife and children is
a complex beast that has eluded many a writer and filmmaker, but Ropert
gets surprisingly close to the heart of the matter, assisted by her
leading man, François Damiens, and her inspired cinematographer
Céline Bozon, who both bring a stark infusion of hibernal
sadness to the film.
A hugely popular comedian in his native Belgium, François
Damiens has recently made his breakthrough into French cinema with
mainstream comedies such as
La
Personne aux deux personnes (2008) and
15 ans et demi (2008).
In
La Famille Wolberg, he is
cast against type and proves that he is equally capable of taking on
straight dramatic roles. In his best screen performance to date,
Damiens is spellbinding as the father whose world is slowly collapsing
around him but who somehow finds the courage to fight on and protect
those nearest to him, encouraged not by his Jewish faith but by the
legendary African American soul musicians he has come to idolise.
On paper, Simon Wolberg may look like a walking cliché, but
Damiens makes him an inordinately complex and charismatic individual,
as contradictory and surprising as the film itself. He realises
too late that his will never be the ideal family that he hankers after,
although he finds some kind of salvation when he realises the fallacy
of his delusions and learns to accept life as it is. With some
equally arresting contributions from a talented supporting cast
(including Jocelyn Quivrin, who tragically died in a car accident a
few weeks before the film was released),
La
Famille Wolberg offers a poignant dissection of a family in
crisis and a father coming to terms with the failure of his
dreams. This is what becomes of the broken hearted...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Simon Wolberg is the mayor of a small provincial town in France.
A devoted husband and loving father, his two main obsessions in life
are listening to American soul music and interfering in the lives of
others. When he learns that his wife has been having an affair
with another man, he wastes no time in tracking down his rival and
threatening him with a mild dose of grievous bodily harm. But
Simon has other worries. His daughter will soon be 18 and is
eager to begin a life of her own, perhaps in another country. His
younger son has detected the rift between his parents and has started
to misbehave at school. And his good-for-nothing brother is
threatening his election campaign by defacing his posters. To top
it all, Simon then discovers that he has lung cancer. He begins
to wonder what his life is for...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.