Film Review
The spirit of Jacques Tati and Charlie Chaplin lives on in this
deliriously madcap romp, the latest foray into absurdist fantasy from
Dominique Abel, Fiona Gordon and Bruno Romy. With a
head-spinning marriage of panache and bravado, this incomparable
trio repeat the winning formula of their previous two films -
L'Iceberg (2005) and
Rumba
(2008) - and help us to rediscover the joys of the old-fashioned sight
gag, whilst making some subtly scathing comments on present day
society.
La Fée
is the team's most adventurous and most enjoyable film to date, so totally
off the wall and unlike anything else in today's cinema that you could
almost swear it was genetically engineeered on another planet. So
idiosyncratic is Abel, Gordon and Romy's brand of cinema that the
French press have struggled to find the words to describe it -
the best they have come up with so far is 'burlesque poétique'
(poetic farce). The phrase 'mad as a larder full of frogs' is just as
fitting...
The curious thing is that whilst the film looks like nothing on Earth,
it has its basis in a style of comedy that is as old as cinema itself
(if not older) - the vaudevillian slapstick pioneered by Max Linder and
Charlie Chaplin, and later refined by Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd and
Laurel and Hardy. The genius of Abel, Gordon and Romy lies
in the way in which they resurrect the old gags, polish them up a bit,
and slot them effortlessly into a modern context. In doing so,
they not only make us laugh but also prompt us to look at familiar
situations from a radically new perspective, something that many of
today's filmmakers seem reluctant or unable to do.
Hard-edged social realism of the Ken Loach variety is one way to draw
our attention to the ills and injustices that afflict contemporary
society. Abel, Gordon and Romy adopt a completely different
approach but achieve a similar result through the art of silent comedy,
luring us in with an easy laugh, then suddenly opening our eyes to the
nastiness that surrounds us and in which we are all partly complicit.
Set in the weather-beaten sea port of Le Havre (the location of many a
doom-laden French melodrama, notably Marcel Carné's 1938
masterpiece
Le Quai des brumes),
La Fée has a somewhat more
sombre feel to it than Abel, Gordon and Romy's previous films, and it
is not too hard to glimpse the sharp shards of social realism amidst
the comedy confetti. An old-fashioned love story (involving
a solitary night watchman and a homeless fairy with a bad taste in
footwear) is the starting point for a surreal odyssey in which our
lovelorn heroes Dom and Fiona (cinema's latest reincarnation of Tristan
and Isolde) run up against the ills and social injustices that blight
present-day society. It is a grim social landscape that Dom and Fiona
end up running about in, one haunted by marginal
undesirables - the homeless, illegal immigrants and the mentally ill, just as
in Chaplin's day.
Although the film does have a political subtext, it is not an overtly
political film. Rather, what it is really about is exposing our
own prejudices and reminding us how little tolerance and generosity we
have for others less fortunate than ourselves. It achieves this
by some outrageous excursions into black comedy - these don't so much
throw political correctness out of the window as hurl it into the food
blender, crush it to atoms (more effectively than any Large Hadron
Collider), flush it down the lavatory and spray the malodorous residue
into the faces of the wilfully indignant. It is not the deformed,
the disabled and the mentally ill that the film is mocking, but rather
our chauvinistic attitudes to those who fall short of our narrow idea
of perfection.
La Fée
is not only a funny and original piece of cinema, a bonanza of comic
book humour that can hardly fail to delight (the sequence in
which an Englishman attempts to smuggle his dog into Dom's hotel is
lethally funny). It is also a film
with a conscience, one that compels us to reflect on our own failings
and on the ills that blight society today. The real function of
comedy is not to make us laugh, but to make us think, and this inspired
film certainly achieves this, in spades.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Dom is a night watchman at a small hotel in the French coastal town of
Le Havre. One evening, a strange woman appears in reception,
without any luggage and with no shoes on her feet. Introducing
herself as Fiona, the woman says she is a fairy and promptly offers Dom
three wishes. The next day, two of the wishes have come true but,
after a romantic underwater liaison, Fiona suddenly goes missing.
Realising that he has fallen in love with the strange woman, Dom
frantically sets about looking for her. Discovering that his now
pregnant soul mate is being held prisoner in a hospital, Dom makes up
his mind to rescue her. Their adventures have only just begun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.