Film Review
This entertaining (and surprisingly dark) satirical thriller about reality TV and megalomaniac
TV executives officially marks the directorial debut of one of France's most promising
acting talents, Guillaume Canet. The streak of jet black comedy running through
the film, rendering some of its more burlesque sequences actually rather disturbing, reminds
one of François Ozon's early films (notably
Sitcom), but Canet's style is markedly different - less stylised, often much
closer to reality as we know it, and therefore a tad more unsettling.
Canet both stars and directs this film - a risky venture for a first film, but one
that certainly pays off. His character resembles the one he played in Philippe Haïm's
oddball comedy thriller
Barracuda
(1997) (from which he also appears to have "borrowed" much of the plot and
style), but Canet does show considerable promise as a director. Although the central
plot is hardly original, many of the jokes are, and, whilst much of the comedy is intentionally
downplayed, there are many genuinely funny moments (plus a few that may turn your stomach).
François Berléand is superlative as the film's principal villain,
the mad, bad or just dangerous to know TV boss Jean-Louis Broustal. Berléand's
portrayal would not be out of place in a Claude Chabrol film - initially presented as
a hard-nosed bland executive, his character gradually metamorphoses into something much
more interesting, indeed terrifying, a being with no moral limits whatsoever. Cleverly,
Canet takes the general public perception of the TV godfather and turns the general, oft-maligned
hate figure into a kind of fairytale bogey man, without undermining the credibility of
either the character or the situation. Throughout, what we see is exactly how we
expect TV executives to behave. Broustal could have gone on to annexe half of Europe
and made the wearing paper hats at Christmas compulsory and he still wouldn't have been
acting out of character. Not even politicians can hope to engender that level of
cynicism.
With such stars as Canet and Berléand giving their best,
Mon
idole races along at quite a pace, managing to be funny, thrilling and weirdly
unpredictable throughout. Unfortunately, the whole thing runs out of steam too quickly
and the understated ending is a slight disappointment. For such an energetic
and character-intense film, you are led to expect a far more explosive finale than a somewhat
muted static showdown followed by a pretty piece of animation. However, taken as
a whole,
Mon idole hangs together rather well,
a stylish and intelligent blend of black comedy and satire. It augurs well for Guillaume
Canet's future career as a director.
© James Travers 2006
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Next Guillaume Canet film:
Ne le dis à personne (2006)
Film Synopsis
Bastien, young and ambitious production assistant for a popular reality TV programme,
is offended when his employer, the star presenter Philippe Letzger, steals his idea for
a new programme. He takes his complaint to Jean-Louis Broustal, the TV station's
headman, and is surprised when Broustal invites him to spend the weekend at his country
estate. Expecting this to be just the boost his career needs, Bastien accepts the
offer, but instead of discussing work with his future employer he finds himself drawn
into the increasingly bizarre domestic routine of Broustal and his implausibly young wife…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.