Film Review
Within days of his trip to Hollywood to collect the Best Actor Oscar
for his role in
The Artist, Jean Dujardin was
back on the big screen in French cinemas, giving what is the histrionic
equivalent of the two-fingered salute to movie star convention as he
takes on his most provocative role to date. A raunchy sex comedy
conceived in the worst possible taste (by Dujardin, as it so happens),
Les Infidèles is a conscious
attempt to counter the wave of political correctness that is presently
sweeping over cinema (not only in France) and threatening the integrity
of our most expressive art form. With its totally uninhibited
exploration of modern day male sexuality, the film risked provoking
national censure and indeed one sequence (referring to the attack on
the Twin Towers in September 2001) had to be excised immediately prior
to its release on grounds of bad taste. The original poster for
the film (which showed a suitably smug Dujardin holding the
spread-eagled legs of a woman) had to be withdrawn when the French
advertising regulator, the ARPP, received numerous complaints of
sexism. However, despite this initial furore and a mixed critical
reaction, the film has proven to be a hit at the French box office and
looks like being one of the biggest successes of the year.
They're a filthy minded lot, the French...
Inspired by those bawdy Italian sex comedies of the 1960s, in
particular Dino Risi's
I Mostri
(1963),
Les Infidèles
is an anthology film comprising several short films that are linked
only by their common theme, male infidelity. As you might expect,
the quality of the segments varies enormously (each was written and
directed by a different team, although some of the actors, notably
Dujardin, appear in several of them). Whilst some - such as
La Bonne conscience, directed by
Michel Hazanavicius (the Oscar winning director of
The Artist) - have some meat to
them and are genuinely funny, others - like Eric Lartigau's
Lolita - are lightweight and
out-stay their welcome by several tedious minutes. When you
consider that one segment (directed by Jan Kounen) ended up on the
cutting room floor because it was felt to be out of place, it is
surprising that more effort was not exercised in ensuring the short
films fitted together better. The principal failing of
Les Infidèles is not that it
is aggressively outré (although it does get uncomfortably close
to the knuckle in a few places, if you'll pardon the expression), but
that it is painfully uneven and so lacking in depth and coherence that
you wonder if you will ever get to the end of it.
Once again, Jean Dujardin revels in another of his stereotypical 'bad
man' roles, the part for which he is best-suited, evidenced by his
enjoyable portrayal of an über-chauvinistic spy in Hazanavicius's
OSS 117 films. It is nice
to see that Dujardin shows absolutely no sign (yet) of being spoiled by
critical acclaim and international stardom, and has no qualms over
taking on the kind of roles that most Hollywood stars would not even
consider.
Les Infidèles
shows Dujardin at his most vomit-inducingly unsympathetic; his
character is pure alpha male in concentrated form, an unimaginably
narcissistic egoist whose attitudes towards women and obsession with
sex make him look like a cross between a Neanderthal and Silvio
Berlusconi on steroids. The more repulsive Dujardin's character
gets, the funnier he is, and it's a great shame that the prologue and
epilogue (the most considered and truthful parts of the
film) could not have been extended into a full-length film and the
intermediate segments jettisoned. In these two sequences Dujardin
is perfectly partnered with Gilles Lellouche, another fine actor with a
natural comic flair. The Dujardin-Lellouche double act is the one
thing that saves the film and gives it not only a semblance of
structure but also the biggest surprise of all, with
Dujardin and Lellouche taking male bonding to its ultimate extreme.
Whilst
Les Infidèles
certainly has honorable intentions - political correctness is the bane
of our era and deserves to be challenged at every opportunity - it does
itself few favours by relying so heavily on crude stereotypes and
situation that are so extreme and caricatured that they are difficult
to relate to. The only part of the film that tries to go beyond
the superficial (the segment titled
La
Question, in which Dujardin has his fidelity probed by (of all
people) his off-screen wife Alexandra Lamy) falls flat because it lacks
the directorial verve of the segments that preceded it. Anyone
who can see the funny side of
penis
captivus and a dog happily chewing on a used condom is unlikely
to be bothered by the film's flagrant lack of substance, but for those
expecting a slightly more incisive commentary on male sexual attitudes
in the 21st century the film can only be a disappointment.
Les Infidèles is daring,
provocative and, in the main, disgustingly entertaining, but it is
ultimately shallow and misses its target by several kilometres.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Emmanuelle Bercot film:
Elle s'en va (2013)
Film Synopsis
What makes a man become unfaithful to his wife? This is a question
that has vexed philosophers and talk show hosts for centuries, and it is
one that two macho 30-something Frenchmen, Fred and Greg, really would like
to have an answer to, because infidelity is something they are both desperately
addicted to. These two alpha males are married and yet neither can
resist the urge to go out in the evening, skulking around nightclubs in the
hope of picking up a suitably willing bit of fluff to round the night off
with. It's not as if either of the men has anything to complain about
in his wife.
Two-timing just seems to be part of their DNA. There's something in
the Y chromosome that compels a man to cheat on his other half as regularly
as he can. Like peeing all over the toilet floor, forgetting wedding
anniversaries and getting paralytically drunk every Friday night, it's just
something that men do. Several tragicomic scenarios that explore man's
unrelenting need for infidelity are presented, but Fred and Greg are still
none the wiser. Ignoring their wives' protests, they jet off to Las
Vegas to grab as much fun as they can. Determined to have a good time,
Fred and his buddy are about to cheat on their wives in a way they had never
thought possible...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.