Film Review
Since Wolfgang Petersen's
Das Boot
(1981) and John McTiernan's
The Hunt for Red October (1990), several
less memorable submarine-based blockbusters have been unleashed on the viewing
public, the latest offering being a big-budget action extravaganza conceived
and executed by a former French diplomat, Antonin Baudry.
Le Chant
du loup (
The Wolf's Call) is a pretty slavish attempt at imitating
its American predecessors, a souped-up Cold War thriller that makes effective
use of its twenty million dollar budget but ends up blowing its own credibility
out of the water with a plot that is about as clichéd and contrived
as it is possible for a mainstream entertainment of this kind to be.
Baudry's first artistic success was a graphic novel he penned in 2010 under
the name Abel Lanzac,
Quai d'Orsay. This was subsequently turned
into a
film comedy of the same title
in 2013, directed Bertrand Tavernier and co-scripted by Baudry. With
a subject that is somewhat outside of his sphere of experience, Baudry resorts
to ludicrous flights of fancy and pinching ideas from other films, with the
result that
Le Chant du loup ends up looking like a best bits compilation
of every similar marine-based action film before it.
Which is not to say it is a bad film. Derivative it may be, but in
the directing seat Baudry handles it with considerable skill and what he
lacks in originality he more than makes up for in gusto. Equipped with
a principal cast of no small pedigree - François Civil, Omar
Sy, Mathieu Kassovitz, Reda Kateb -
Le Chant du loup has enough acting
muscle to make up for the shallow and formulaic screenplay which tends to
overlook little things like character depth and human motivation in its pursuit
of cheap thrills. The performances are commendable, although the characters
are less convincing than might have been the case had Baudry made the effort
to inject a little more psychology into his screenplay.
Attempts to introduce some real human interest into the plot-heavy intrigue
- such as a romantic subplot - are too half-hearted and mechanical to ring
true. And when the film gets into its second half the plot contrivances
completely run away with themselves, with every hackneyed device known to
man being called into service to convince us that the future of the world
hangs in the balance as our heroes get caught up in a manic race against
time. The only thing that Baudry overlooked was a power-mad villain
of the Fu Manchu variety taunting the civilised world with his latest dastardly
plan for world domination.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Aboard a fully armed French nuclear submarine, a young sonar technician,
Chanteraide, plays a vital role detecting unfamiliar sounds with his highly
sensitive ears. He is reputed to be infallible but in the course of
a dangerous operation in the Middle East he makes a serious error which puts
the entire crew of his vessel in peril. On his return to base, he resolves
to uncover the reason for his mistake and regain the confidence of his superiors.
But in doing so, Chanteraide merely gets himself into deeper water.
With Russia heading inexorably towards conflict with Europe, the stakes are higher than
ever before as the sonar technician tries to redeem himself. Time is
fast running out - not just for Chanteraide, but for the entire human race...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.