Film Review
After an absence of four years (during which he has had ample time to
contemplate the state of French cinema and reassess his own
contribution), Bertrand Blier made a remarkable return to form with a
film which, on the face of it, first sounds like a sick joke carried to
ludicrous proportions. It's about a man who, literally, gets to
have a relationship with his cancer, the latter being represented by an
unwelcome houseguest. Blier has always been something of an agent
provocateur with a penchant for the experimental, and it is good to see
these traits still alive and kicking in his latest offering, one of the
weirdest films about living with a terminal illness that you are ever
likely to see.
Le Bruit des glaçons is
Blier at his wackiest and most inspired, a film which, unlike anything
he has made over the last fifteen years, bears favourable comparison
with his early masterworks. It has the savagely dark humour of
Les
Valseuses (1974), the stifling surrealism of
Buffet
froid (1979) and the wry, twisted humanity of
Trop belle pour toi
(1989). Avoiding the stylistic excesses of his more recent films,
Blier returns to a simpler mode of storytelling, with a small,
perfectly chosen cast and a minimalist mise en scène - an
approach which allows his dark humour and flair for characterisation to
play to greatest effect.
Blier's films are always superbly cast and this one is no
exception. Jean Dujardin has no difficulty shaking off his
cocksure OSS 117 persona and is virtually unrecognisable as the burned
out writer whose taste for living has all but evaporated.
Whilst Blier does throw one or two other characters into the fray
(including a lovelorn housekeeper and her own cancer, played with gusto by Anne Alvaro and Myriam
Boyer), the film is largely a two-hander between Dujardin and Albert
Dupontel, another superlative performer who gets to play the former's
live-in terminal disease, a role that makes a useful addition to any
actor's CV.
Dujardin and Dupontel complement one another perfectly and appear so at
ease in Blier's bizarre fantasy world that the film soon acquires a
reality all of its own. Our suspension of disbelief is quickly
engaged and remains in force right up until the closing titles.
Le Bruit des glaçons is
Bertrand Blier's most entertaining and stimulating film in two decades,
despite the bleakness of the subject it deals with. Who said
dying from cancer is no laughing matter? Imaginatively scripted
and directed with restraint tempered by a soupçon of unbridled
insanity, it offers a thoughtful and thought-provoking reflection on
sickness and mortality. The Blier we know and love is back in
town.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Bertrand Blier film:
Si j'étais un espion (1967)
Film Synopsis
Disappointed with his lacklustre career as a writer, Charles Faulque sinks
into a deep depression. He takes solace by moping in solitude at his
large luxury house in the south of France and pouring large quantities of
alcoholic refreshment down his throat. He has much to regret.
Not only has he failed as a writer, he has also managed to completely screw
up his marriage, and now his son will have nothing more to do with him.
Just when things couldn't get any worse, Charles receives an unexpected visit
one day from a stranger who introduces himself as the cancer from which he
will eventually die.
After several attempts to eradicate this unwelcome intruder prove unsuccessful,
Charles becomes more sociable and engages his cancer in conversation.
Well, if you know someone or something is going to kill you, you should at
least take advantage of the opportunity to become acquainted with your killer
and see how he/she/it feels about the matter. And Charles's cancer,
despite his lethal connotations, turns out to be an amiable conversationalist
to have around the house. He's not such depressing company as you might
think, although you might think twice about taking him out for a meal.
Louisa, Charles' devoted housekeeper, has no idea what to make of her employer's
strange behaviour. Unable to see the cancer for herself she concludes
that he must be going out of his mind...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.