Film Review
The popular French comedian Jérôme Commandeur took time off
from his day job to direct (if that's the word) this infuriatingly inept
and distinctly unpleasant comedy. He shares the directing duties with
Alan Corno, for whom this is also a directing debut, although he has more
experience, having worked as an assistant on several popular comedies including
De vrais mensonges
(2010) and
Les Vacances
du petit Nicolas (2014). Commandeur and Corno inherited the
film from Dany Boon, who was apparently too busy doing other things to direct
it himself, although you wonder if that was his real motive for walking away
from it.
Ma famille t'adore déjà is a spectacularly
unfunny comedy and it's remarkable how a film with such a talented cast (including
Commandeur, a fine comedy performer) could go so horribly awry. We
have grown used to seeing Thierry Lhermitte and Marie-Anne Chazel slumming
it in dismal misfires by now, but what on Earth possessed Déborah
François and Sabine Azéma to waste their talents on such low-grade
trash?
Commandeur and Corno show next to no promise as directors, but when they
have such an abysmal and completely mirthless screenplay to work with you
can see straight away
why they made such a bad job of helming the
film. The characters, the situations, the gags all look like something
an unimaginative ten year old might have dreamed up and scribbled down in
his exercise book on the bus on his way home from school. If only the
dialogue wasn't so gratingly crass, if only the acting wasn't so depressingly
over-the-top, if only there were at least three or four decent gags in this
ghastly ocean of vacuity you might have forgiven the film its scrappy excesses
and non-stop abject puerility. But no,
Ma famille t'adore déjà
is a film that has absolutely no redeeming features. None whatsoever.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Now that he has found his ideal soul-mate, Julien, a thirty-something designer
of smartphone apps, decides the time has come to end his bachelor days and
get married. Éva, a busy career journalist, is his intended
bride, and if it weren't for her family the marriage would have gone off
without a hitch. Unfortunately, Éva feels it is her duty to
introduce her future husband to her parents, who live in retirement on the
island of Ré. Julien does his best to make a good impression
on his future in-laws, but their habit of playing practical jokes and acting
like fugitives from a lunatic asylum does not make this an easy task.
Not only that, he has already got off on the wrong foot with Éva's
brother, Jean-Seb. The greatest threat to Julien's wedding plans presents
itself in the form of the seductive German nurse that Jean-Seb and his wife
Corinne have just engaged to look after their children...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.