Film Review
Michel Leclerc's second film, after his enjoyable
debut feature
J'invente rien (2006), is this
astute political comedy which was well-received by both the
critics and the cinema-going public when it was first released in
France. Whilst it does try a little too hard to get the laughs
with its ribald (and occasionally sick) humour,
Le Nom des gens does offer a
sobering reflection on some important contemporary themes - the
value of national identity, the prevalence of racial intolerance
and the naivety of those who commit themselves to political causes
(albeit with the best of intentions). Many of the jokes are
unlikely to register with a non-French audience, but the issues it
addresses, admittedly in a tongue-in-cheek and often provocative vein,
definitely should not be lost in translation. The success of this
film in France - it won Césars for its screenplay and lead
actress - had as much to do with its topicality as its intrinsic merits. This
is not to belittle its many strengths.
Le
Nom des gens is imaginatively written and directed with great verve,
a refreshing departure from the formulaic rom-coms that filmmakers have
been churning out lately on both sides of the Atlantic.
The film revolves around two chalk-and-cheese characters: a
strait-laced, hyper-cautious bird-flu expert (who happens to have the
same name as a well-known brand of electrical appliances - a gag
mine that is rapidly depleted) and a leftwing political activist who believes
that seduction and a packet of three is the best way to win a political
argument. The first is played by Jacques Gamblin, a dependable stalwart of
French cinema who excels in this kind of timid everyman role, and Sara
Forestier, a raging tornado in thespian form who rocketed to stardom
through her appearance in Abdellatif Kechiche's
L'Esquive
(2003). What happens when these two seemingly ill-matched
characters meet is entirely predictable, but Leclerc and his
co-screenwriter Baya Kasmi manage to disguise the well-worn path quite
well by throwing in a few surreal flights fancy and bizarre digressions
to keep that annoying déja-và impression at bay.
Most memorable is the outré interlude in which the
heroine, her attention monopolised by a conversation on her mobile phone, leaves her
apartment stark naked and ends up making an exhibition of herself in
the Paris metro, in what is presumably a modern tribute to Manet's Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe.
The biggest surprise is when Lionel Jospin (France's former socialist
Prime Minister - reported missing, believed dead, when Jean-Marie Le
Pen knocked him out of the 2002 French Presidential election) suddenly
turns up out of the blue and starts fielding jokes at his own
expense. At this point, you can't help feeling that you've been
ejected into the Twilight Zone, or at least have had one glass of neat
vodka too many. Jospin's unexpected and rather endearing cameo turn proves to be the
highlight of the film and it neatly underlines what it is really about - which
is that politics is only good for us if it is consumed in
moderation. The more seriously the politically minded do-gooders
take themselves, the more they believe in the unassailable righteousness of their causes,
the more dangerous and divided the world becomes.
Le Nom des gens is a timely
reminder that we should all lighten up, loosen the strings on our
political corsets and adopt a far less Manichean and more adult view of the world's
problems. Or is that too radical a view?
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Bahia Benmahmoud is an extroverted young woman who takes her political
activism seriously. She has no scruples over sleeping with the
enemy, not if she can convert him to her cause. Her track
record of winning converts is unbroken - until she meets Arthur
Martin. A timid forty-something, Arthur would appear to be an
easy conquest. But appearances can be very deceptive...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.