Film Review
The immense success of Marc Esposito's
Coeur des hommes (2003) created
a popular sub-genre in French cinema (mostly comedies) celebrating
enduring friendships between men who are well into middle-age.
2015 has been a bountiful year for fans of this kind of film, with not
only Olivier Baroux and Richard Berry getting in on the act - with
Entre
Amis and
Nos femmes respectively - but
also former rugby footballer Philippe Guillard, looking for an easy
ride after his hit debut feature
Le Fils à Jo
(2011). Guillard's
On voulait
tout casser is as formulaic and vacuous as any the genre has so
far served up, and even the pleasure of seeing Kad Merad teamed up with
Charles Berling and Benoît Magimel is mitigated by a script that
takes recycling to ludicrous extremes.
The film's main problem is not that it lazily stomps over already
well-worn territory with the refined elegance of a three-legged
diplodocus making its way home after an all-night drinking binge, but that it
feels the necessity to tag on the creaking plot device of a terminal
illness and use this as the lamest of pretexts for an unseemly surge of
pre-senility male bonding. It wouldn't be so bad if the males
concerned acted their age and proffered a sincere reflection on the
emptiness of their existences; no, they seem to spend most of the film
indulging in juvenile antics that make them look like over-aged
teenagers auditioning for the latest reality TV show. The women in the film
are even less well-developed than the men and could conceivably have all been
replaced with cardboard cutouts without anyone noticing. The
sincerity and authenticity of Guillard's previous film are conspicuous by their absence.
The sparky cast dynamics prevent the whole thing from being a total
write-off however, although the age range of the five leads (with Benoît
Magimel too young to fit in) undermines the film's premise
somewhat. Some unfortunate excursions into sentimentality of the yukiest kind
do little for the film's credibility and the humour is mostly on the
anorexic side, so slight that you hardly notice it. After
manipulating the audience's emotions for most of the film with the
deftness and subtlety of a Stockhausen recital in the early hours,
Guillard ends it in a truly cringeworthy vein, with
a cataclysmic barrage of cliché. If this doesn't kill the now
totally stale genre of 50-something male bonding stone dead, nothing
will.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After he is diagnosed with cancer, fifty-something Kiki learns that he has only
five months left to live. On the spur of the moment, he decides
to fulfil a longstanding dream, to set off in a boat and sail around
the world. When his four bosom friends - Tony, Bilou,
Gérôme and Pancho - get wind of Kiki's plans they quickly
realise what prompted him to attempt such an ambitious feat. The
impending loss of one member of their gang causes the five friends to
reflect on their lives and wonder what became of all their adolescent
dreams...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.