Film Review
One of the mainstream hits of 2010 was the punchy political comedy
Le Nom des gens, in which writer-director
Michel Leclerc and his co-writer Baya Kasmi took great delight in mocking
the limits of political conviction in France today, particularly in those
on the left-side of the political spectrum. Almost a decade on, socialism
still remains something of a dirty word in France, in spite of the social
mayhem that rightwing president Nicolas Sarkozy has inflicted on the country.
In
La Lutte des classes, Leclerc and Kasmi have another go at gentle
left-bashing, although on this occasion they are hardly up to the task of
lampooning one of the most pressing public concerns today: the future of
state education.
In Leclerc's latest film (his fifth so far), a socially minded couple are
faced with the unwelcome prospect of abandoning their dearly held leftwing
values when it becomes apparent to them that their son's education might
be better served by the private sector. As Leclerc and Kasmi show,
with their customary good-natured humour and flair for irony, this is no
trivial matter. Set against a parents' moral duty to do their best
for their offspring, there is the wider moral question over what happens
to state education when those who can afford to abandon it altogether, leaving
an under-funded, publicly run rump education system that exists only to keep
the children of the poor off the streets.
La Lutte des classes sets up this polemic with commendable deftness
in its first half but, having failed to present even a half-credible solution,
concludes with the most ludicrously contrived happy ending you can imagine.
Part of the problem with the film is that - in contrast to the writing team's
earlier satire - it uses far too broad a brush to make its point, with the
result that the authors' more serious messages tend to get drowned in a sea
of cliché and facile humour.
It doesn't help that the characters who are played so enthusiastically and
sympathetically by Leïla Bekhti and Edouard Baer are the most egregious
of caricatures - far more like what you would expect to find in a teenager's
bande dessinée than in a considered piece of movie satire.
Even more depressing is the fact that, in order to make their case, the film's
authors have to resort to the most extreme scenario conceivable - a little
boy being completely abandoned by his classmates so that his face is the
only white one in a swollen mass of brown at a sink school that would have
difficulty overtaking St Trinians in the school league tables. Yes,
satirists will always exaggerate real situations for comic effect, but there's
a limit to have far you can take this and Leclerc probably goes a few hundred
steps too far towards the excessively inane in his less than dignified attempts
to make us laugh.
A somewhat botched satire it might be, but
La Lutte des classes still
has some mileage as a feel-good crowdpleaser and, providing you don't take
it too seriously, it will get you laughing. There's plenty of fun to
be found in Bekhti and Baer's hopeless struggle against the irresistible
lure of bourgeoisification as they fail to reconcile their parental responsibilities
with their wider duties to society. This portrait of a morally conflicted
couple being induced to 'sell out' for well-meaning but dubious motives succinctly
encapsulates at least part of the widespread malaise that is presently ripping
our society apart. For all its flippant humour, the film does have
a message for those perceptive enough to see it - we can indulge our self-interested
individualism if we want to, but only if we are prepared to pay the price
- a society that continues to crumble all around us.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Sofia, a successful lawyer of North African origin, and her husband Paul,
an ageing drummer with a punk band, move to the pleasant suburb of Bagnolet
on the outskirts of Paris. Being inclined to the left politically,
they have no qualms over sending their young son Corentin to the local state-run
primary school. But times are changing and, as the district becomes
more racially mixed, standards at Corentin's school show a marked decline.
The better off parents move their beloved offspring to a nearby private Catholic
school, which offers a far better education for those able to pay the fees.
It isn't long before Corentin's friends have all departed, leaving him the
only white boy in his class. Realising how unhappy their son has become,
Sofia and Paul contemplate moving him to the better school. But how
can they square this with their political ideals?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.