Film Review
Famous for their regular contributions to Canal+'s
Groland escapades, Emmanuel
Caussé and Eric Martin make their film directing debut with this
western-style eco-comedy which, for all its wild
excesses, is highly topical and reminds us of the constant threat our
beautiful countryside faces from what is so laughingly called 'progress'.
No Pasaran derives its title from
the rallying cry of the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War - it
translates as: "They will not pass!" The battle lines are clearly
drawn, between self-interested politicians and lawyers who hope to
capitalise on the building of a motorway through an area of exceptional
natural beauty (in the stunning Ariège department of
southwest France) and an uneasy alliance of those who want merely to
protect their way of life and those who are itching for an ecologically
motivated punch-up. All this sounds terribly clichéd and,
if the film has one killer fault, it is that it relies far too heavily
on familiar clichés, lazily using caricature instead of
developing rounded, believable characters.
Whilst
No Pasaran offers few
surprises and treads well-worn ground somewhat clumsily for the most
part, it is hard to resist its boisterous sense of fun and frequent
excursions into the bizarrely surreal.. Voice over narration is
provided by a cute mountain bear (whose nasty comeuppance provides a
treat for those who can stick with the film right to the end).
Most of the characters look as if they have fallen from the pages of a
satirical comic book, the most enjoyably daft being a mad ego-warrior
enthusiastically played by Rossy de Palma, famous for her frequent
collaborations with the Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar.
No Pasaran is perhaps too
off-the-wall and anarchic to be taken seriously, but its unbridled
humour (an odd mix of black comedy and farce) and weird flights of
fancy make it a reasonably entertaining timewaster, and, because the
natural splendour of the location is so vividly evoked, we are never
allowed to forget the film's serious political subtext for a moment.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Maxence Lafourcade is a contented thirty-something who is happy rearing
pigs on his small farm in the Pyrenees. Imagine then his horror
when he discovers that the authorities have given the green light for a
motorway to be built just a few feet from his doorstep! The local
mayor has laboured day and night for months to get the motorway in his
backyard, convinced that it will bring much prosperity to the region, and he
has no intention of cancelling the project. Determined to save
his farm and his way of life, Maxence allies himself with his
neighbour, an American lawyer, and his eccentric artist, Scarlett, who
is fixated on painting mutilated animals. Within no time, Maxence
has assembled a small but determined resistance army which includes:
his cousin, the owner of a petrol station who fears losing his
customers; the mayor's nephew, a football champion; and a hyper-aggressive
eco-warrior...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.