La Jeune fille et les loups (2008) Directed by Gilles Legrand
Drama
aka: The Maiden and the Wolves
Film Review
Gilles Legrand's second full length film has pretty well the same
strengths and weaknesses of his first, Malabar Princess (2004).
Both are family-friendly dramas which are set in picturesque rural
France and explore man's dual-edged relationship with the natural
world. However, both films suffer from a staid, overly cautious
approach to filmmaking that robs the film of any true meaning or
sentiment. Whilst the film's naive style may make it attractive
to youngsters, it is less likely to appeal to adult viewers,
particularly those who expect greater narrative sophistication than a
child's nativity play can offer.
La Jeune fille et les loups is
an attractively shot film with some commendable performances - notably
from Laetitia Casta and Stefano Accorsi - but somehow hardly any of it
rings true. To its credit, the film never quite sinks to the
depths of abject over-sentimentality, yet it still manages to have a
deficit of sincerity and emotional truth. The characters are
well-drawn and convincingly played, but it is hard to engage with them
and feel any sympathy with their plight. It's a kind of
"painting-by-numbers" film - technically it is perfectly sound, but it
just feels soulless, lacking that vital spark that it needs to make an
impact and justify the purchase of a cinema ticket.
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Film Synopsis
Since childhood, Angèle has had an affinity with the animal
kingdom. In 1918, aged twenty, she makes the decision to become
a vet, even though the profession has so far excluded women
practitioners. One day, she finds herself lost and injured in
open countryside, and it is wolves, not men, who come to her aid.
The wolves belong to Giuseppe, a recluse who lives alone in the
mountains and who is as wary of other men as the animals he has vowed
to protect. Angèle later discovers that the mayor of her
town, an opportunistic industrialist named Emile Garcin, intends to
eradicate the wolves to make the region more attractive to
tourists. To save the animals, Angèle is prepared to do
anything, even exploiting Garcin's amorous intentions for her...
From Jean Renoir to François Truffaut, French cinema has no shortage of truly great filmmakers, each bringing a unique approach to the art of filmmaking.
With so many great films to choose from, it's nigh on impossible to compile a short-list of the best 15 French films of all time - but here's our feeble attempt to do just that.