Film Review
Sylvain Monod had amassed an impressive set of credits
as a production manager (on such diverse films as
Laurence Ferreira Barbosa's
Les Gens normaux n'ont rien d'exceptionnel (1993),
Philippe Garrel's
Le Coeur fantôme (1996) and
Lucas Belvaux's
Pour rire! (1996))
before he embarked on a career as a film director with this
somewhat muddled comedy.
Perhaps the most significant thing about
On a très peu
d'amis is that it gave Mathieu Amalric, the darling of the film auteur,
one his first comedic roles, not long after he had had his big screen breakthrough in
Arnaud Desplechin's
Comment je me suis disputé... (ma vie sexuelle) (1996).
Here, Amalric is effectively partnered with Michel Vuillermoz, the duo
forming one of those memorable chalk-and-cheese double acts which
French cinema seems to abound in.
The film is a somewhat scrappy affair which lacks both coherence
and a clear direction of travel, the narrative essentially being just a string of
improbable situations which get less funny as the film progresses.
The abrupt shift in focus in the last third of the film, away from the two principal characters,
is hard to fathom and pretty well completes the job of audience
alienation that Monod had all but accomplished by this point.
It's basically a film that starts out well enough, offers a few easy laughs, but just gives up around
the halfway stage.
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Ivan and Serge are two friends who, having failed to make their fortune
in Paris, head back to their home town of Aurillac without a sou to their
name. Encouraged by their old friends, they embark on a strange new
career, entering dancing competitions and living on the pittance they manage
to win in prize money. All goes well until, one day, they run into
a desperate armed crook named Richard, who is badly wounded after robbing
a bank.
Ivan and Serge take pity on the injured man and agree to take him back with
them to their home town, to be tended to by their friends. The latter
include Maxence, who agrees to set out for Lyon to fetch Richard's girlfriend
Lucie. Instead, Maxence meets up with his own lady friend, Evelyne,
and, hearing that Richard has just died, decides to pass her off as Lucie.
This way, he hopes to grab himself a large share of the huge stack of cash
that Richard stole and which, by rights, is now the property of his mistress...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.