Film Review
For
Les Chaises musicales,
her first feature as a director, Marie Belhomme plays it safe with a
genre - the sentimental comedy - that is fairly well-liked in France,
milking the enduring appeal of such films as
Bridget Jones's Diary.
Isabelle Carrée is an obvious shoe-in for the part of the
socially inept spinster, virtually reprising the role that she had
previously played in Jean-Pierre Améris's
Les Émotifs anonymes (2010)
(and probably a dozen other similar films). Carrée's
likeably gauche presence certainly helps to sell the film, but its lack
of ambition and fanciful narrative prevent it from being anything more
than a mildly engaging timewaster.
The film starts by introducing Carrée's somewhat pathetic
character, one of those sad lonely souls who fail to grow up and seem
destined to spend their entire lives in a state of arrested
development. Perrine's childishness is underlined by her odd
career choice, which sees her dressing up in outlandish outfits (mostly
of a fruit and veg theme) to amuse easily pleased partygoers. She
may not have David Prowse's build but this doesn't stop Perrine from
adopting Darth Vader's sinister garb, and as she runs about the
countryside thus arrayed she ends up by putting a man into a
coma. She would probably have had the same effect if she had been
dolled up as Princess Leia.
Piling silliness upon silliness, Belhomme then has her heroine
embarking on a spate of identity theft, or maybe identity 'borrowing'
would be a better way of putting it. Perrine's interest in
stealing her victim's life is clearly only temporary, to last the
duration of his coma, but if her motives were amorously motivated you
have to ask yourself: what kind of man would fall for someone who
rushes about the country dressed as Darth Vader and then steals his
home, his job and his dog? At no point does the narrative or the
characters within it ring true, and even the presence of such
delightful performers as Isabelle Carrée and Carmen Maura cannot
salvage a film that makes so little emotional connection with its
audience. Still, Carrée's brief flirtation with the Dark
Side fulfils at least one male fantasy, and all that's missing is Maura
doing her Chewbacca party piece - maybe Belhomme is holding that back
for the sequel?
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Perrine is a forty-something spinster who has so far managed to let
love pass her by. She has set her sights on making a career as a
musician, but lacking talent in this area she ends up having to earn a
crust by making a fool of herself at parties, usually in old people's
homes. She is on her way to one of these dismal dos when
she loses her way and ends up having to ask a stranger for
directions. The sight of Darth Vader wielding a scythe (the
costume adopted by Perrine for her latest assignment) causes the
unfortunate man to fall headfirst into a skip. With the unknown
man in a coma in a hospital, Perrine does all she can to bring him round,
passing herself off as a relative so that she can speak to him.
As her amorous fancy takes hold of her, Perrine allows herself to be
drawn into his life. She moves into his apartment, takes his job
and even adopts his dog. It's one way of falling in
love...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.