Film Review
Le Cinéma de papa is
the most heartfelt and mostly shamelessly sentimental entry in the
series of strongly autobiographical films that Claude Berri made early
in his career, many years before he garnered worldwide acclaim for his
overblown blockbusters as
Jean de Florette (1986) and
Germinal
(1993). An affectionate, albeit deeply nostalgic, portrayal of
family life, this film is less about the young Berri discovering his
vocation in life and more about his intense and ambiguous relationship
with his father. Indeed, Berri almost allows himself to be
reduced to a supporting character, his father - magnificently portrayed
by Yves Robert - taking centre stage for most of the film. With
three full-length films and an Oscar-winning short already under his
belt, Berri was by now a confident filmmaker, popular with both critics
and audiences. François Truffaut was especially fulsome in
his praise for
Le Cinéma de
papa, maybe because it chimed with his own earlier
Les 400 coups (1959) and
revealed in its author a kindred spirit - an introverted man who was
passionately devoted to cinema and who was obsessed with his parental
influence.
Picking up where Berri's earlier
Le Vieil homme et l'enfant
(1967) left off, the adorable child actor Alain Cohen reprises his role
as Berri (bearing his real name Claude Langmann) in his early teens for
the first part of the film, which has the young Berri living out his
own version of
Les 400 coups,
giving up on school so that he can nurture his burgeoning passion for
cinema to his father's inconsolable dismay. It is a portrait of
childhood that is as tender as it is brutal, and in one scene we are
shocked when the young Berri is badly beaten up by his (justifiably
provoked) father. Half an hour in, the story fast-forwards to the
late 1950s, with a now grown-up Berri (played by the man himself)
trying hopelessly to live his dream, supported by an over-indulgent
father who hasn't the heart to force his infantile offspring into
getting himself a proper job. Our sympathies lie more with the
hardworking furrier struggling to support his family than with the
layabout son who spends most of his time in a fluffy daydream. If
Berri had had a less supportive father not only would his personal
history have been very different, but French cinema of the 1980s
through to the 2000s might have altered beyond recognition, robbed of
such diverse and cherished offerings as
Trois places pour le 26 (1988),
La Reine Margot (1994),
Astérix & Obélix:
Mission Cléopâtre (2002) and
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis
(2008). French film fans owe a great deal to Hirsch Langmann and
it is fitting that his son should offer up this tribute to him.
Berri's early humorous mishaps as an actor preoccupy a fair chunk of
the film's middle section and here he comes across as a Gallic Mr Bean,
destined to fail at everything he turns his hand to. After
suffering the indignity of being thrown into a river, he is summarily
ejected from one film set because of his inability to speak
English. A Chaplinesque pathos accompanies Berri as his amorous
escapades end as dismally as his attempts to break into cinema and you
wonder how someone who is so congenitally useless and unlucky could
ever end up as one of France's most commercially successful film
directors and producers. It is ultimately Berri's love for his
father, and equivalently his father's love for him, that redeems him
and sets him on the right road after countless false starts. As
happened in real life, Berri and his father are seen working together
on a script which would ultimately see the light of day as the film we
are watching.
The two men's separate attempts at re-writing history (they clearly do
not share the same memory of events) send the film off in a weird
direction with conflicting realities causing us to wonder whether we
should take any part of the film seriously, but what emerges is how
utterly devoted to each other the son and father were. Berri not
only adored his father, he absolutely idolised him, evidenced by his
determination to have him play his larger-than-life self in
Le Cinéma de papa.
Alas, Langmann Senior died before this dream could be realised,
providing the film with a much more poignant ending than its author had
originally intended. Before choosing Yves Robert to play his
father, Berri approached several other actors for the role, including
Louis de Funès and Peter Ustinov - a measure perhaps of how
highly he regarded the person who had the greatest influence on him and
made it possible for him to pursue his dream right through to the end.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Claude Berri film:
La Première fois (1976)
Film Synopsis
In 1946, 12-year-old Claude Langmann lives with his parents, Jewish
immigrants, and newborn sister Arlette in a busy district of
Paris. He is already experiencing the pains of early adolescence,
although this is eased by his growing love of cinema. His father
Hirsch, the owner of a thriving fur business, has high hopes that he
will make a success of his life, but Claude has no aptitude for
schoolwork and fails his end of primary school exam. Whilst
working as an apprentice for his father, Claude nurtures ambitions of
becoming a great actor, like his idol Jean Marais, but twelve years on
he is still living with his parents and still waiting for the film role
that will make him a star. Acting seems not to be Claude's
metier, so he decides instead to become a theatre producer, with money
supplied by his father and his father's friends to mount a production
of a stage play by an unknown writer. It proves to be yet another
calamity, but shortly afterwards Claude has his moment of
epiphany. He will tell the story of his life, emphasising his
recent amorous disappointments, in a film in which he will play
himself. The script appeals to one producer, but Claude is none
too pleased when the lead role is given to a more experienced and
better looking actor. Bruised but not beaten by this latest
comedown, Claude then comes up with his masterstroke: he will write a
film devoted to his father. Just when the young man is confident
of success, tragedy strikes...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.