Film Review
After scripting one animal-themed comedy-drama,
Sunny et
l'éléphant (2007), Olivier Horlait makes his
directing debut with another, adapted from Eric Boisset's popular novel
Nicostratos le pélican.
Shot on location on the beautiful Greek islands in the Aegean, the film
is visually stunning and will doubtless do much for the Greek tourist
industry but its tepid, Disney-style approach to storytelling makes it
far more suitable for children than an adult audience. Even
though it deals with some profound themes - a son coming to terms with
the death of his mother, his attempts to build bridges with his
distanced father and the upheavals of early adolescence - the
film feels slight and whimsical, content merely to coast along on the
surface of a very deep ocean rather than delve more deeply into its
murky depths. It's a likeable but pretty average family film
which ten-to-fourteen year-olds will enjoy and older spectators may
warm to on account of its peculiar charm and some irresistible
animal-themed humour.
Thibault Le Guellec is certainly engaging as the 'wild child'
protagonist Yannis, who is more a watered down Antoine Doinel than the
sweet picture of innocence you'd expect to find in a comparable Disney
offering. Needless to day, it is Le Guellec's scenes with the
titular pelican that are the heart and soul of the film, funny and
tender in equal measure. These make an effective contrast with
the boy's scenes with his brutal and emotionally repressed father,
played to lugubrious perfection by Emir Kusturica, the most familiar face in the
cast. For an adult viewer, the boy's attempts to establish some
kind of emotional rapport with his father are the most interesting part
of the film, although Horlait underplays this, perhaps through fear of
alienating his younger spectators. The film's least successful
element is Yannis' first experience with the opposite sex - this looks
suspiciously like an afterthought and weakens an already overloaded
narrative. Despite some obvious shortcomings on both the writing
and directing fronts,
Nicostratos le
pélican makes for a charming, low-key coming-of-age
piece, its chief delights being its gorgeous cinematography and some
inspired bouts of humour. In what other film can you witness a
merciless vendetta between a pelican and a goat?
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Yannis is 14 and lives on an unspoiled Greek island with his father,
with whom he has a close bond after the death of his mother. On a
trip to Athens, the boy comes to the rescue of a young pelican named
Nicostratos and feels obliged to adopt him. To avoid
incurring his father's wrath, Yannis is forced to raise the bird in
secret. He soon becomes a local celebrity as Nicostratos makes
the island a popular tourist attraction...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.