Film Review
If there is one thing that can be said about director François
Ozon (and perhaps the only thing that can be said with any
certainty) it is that he is never predictable. Over the past decade the
one-time enfant terrible of French cinema has entertained and
confounded audiences with a series of films
(roughly one a year) which, on the face of it, have nothing to connect
them other than a slightly warped view of human nature. Ozon's
films differ in both style and subject, ranging from
surreal parodies of everyday middleclass life to a Bergman-like
dissection of a failed marriage, via an über-kitsch musical
whodunnit. Ozon's latest film
Ricky
offers another bizarre excursion into unfamiliar territory, a
hard-edged social realist drama centred around a flying baby.
Ricky seems to be the answer
to one of those irritating conundrums you get in Christmas crackers:
what do you get if you cross a Ken Loach film with one made by David
Cronenberg? Perhaps the most surprising aspect of this film
is its realist handling of a fantastic proposition. You can just
imagine how
Ricky would have
turned out if it had been made in Hollywood - all saccharine and CGI, a
whimsical fantasy that is perfect for that family afternoon TV slot on
Christmas Day. Ozon's film is more wholesome and quirkier than this, and
a far more tantalising prospect for the cynically minded, a film that
offers a fresh and idiosyncratic reflection on the
miracle of child birth.
Rose Tremain's fanciful short story
Moth
is not something that appears to be readily adaptable for cinema but
François Ozon evidently saw something in it that would allow him
to express his fascination with one aspect of life that we all take for
granted, the existence of babies. His film also has a
subtle allegorical dimension, reminding us of the uniqueness of each
individual human life, the moral being that every baby that is born has
its own unique abilities, its own needs, and its own way of looking at
the world. We don't need to sprout wings to
know that each and every one of us is a one-off.
Ricky has that slick and thoughtful quality that we have
come to expect of Ozon, but it lacks the gravitas and maturity of
some of the director's previous films. After a promising first
half, the film slips back a few gears and loses both momentum and
a sense of direction. It is as if Ozon has set himself a
challenge that he does not quite know how to resolve. Just
what can you do with a flying baby once you have introduced the
concept and exhausted all the obvious gags? The failings
in the script department are to some extent compensated for
by the well-judged performances from the leads Alexandra Lamy and
Sergi López, even if both actors are visibly struggling
to prevent the focus from being ripped away from them by the
charismatic baby performer Arthur Peyret. The special effects are
also of a high standard and, to Ozon's credit, used sparingly so as not
to undermine the film's realist slant. You will believe that
a baby can fly...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next François Ozon film:
Le Refuge (2010)
Film Synopsis
Katie is having a hard life as a single mother. Her boyfriend walked out on
her after making her pregnant and she has had to bring up her daughter
Lisa alone, working long hours in a factory to earn a modest wage to
keep them both. Then, one day, the sunshine comes back into
Katie's life. She meets a man, Paco, and she falls in love.
The result of this happy romance is that Katie is pregnant for a second time.
On this occasion, she gives birth to a baby boy, whom Lisa christens
Ricky. Not long after the birth, Katie notices some strange
bruises on her newborn's back and concludes that Paco has been beating
him. Paco denies this and decides to end his relationship with
Katie. Then something happens which takes Katie completely by
surprise. It appears that Ricky is no ordinary baby...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.