Film Review
Two years was how long it took the producer of
Un ange to find a distributor
after it had been made... and it's not hard to see why. For his
second feature, director Miguel Courtois was keen to bring a new slant
to a popular genre in French cinema, the crime-thriller.
Unfortunately, he manages to get it almost completely wrong. The
plot of this supposedly upgraded
policier
is unbelievably hackneyed, to the extent that it is very nearly a
tedious montage of tired clichés which would have looked dated even in the
1970s. Courtois's heavy-handed attempts at originality are pretty
well limited to the film's visual style, which wouldn't have been so bad
if he had been a little more restrained. What we get is an almost
continuous barrage of overly athletic camera movement (every kind of
pan and
zoom you can imagine) which, for
the most part, serves merely to distract the spectactor
and heighten the sense of nausea. On
the plus side, the film has a strong cast, but since the
characterisation is so weak and the plot so lacking in credibility,
this ends up feeling like an expensive icing on a pretty indigestible
gâteau.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
As she walks out of prison, Léa's only thought is to make a fresh
start in life, far from the father who has no interest in her and the brother,
Samy, whose criminal exploits got her arrested and sent away. Most of
all, she intends staying clear of Zach, the small-time hoodlum she once loved,
and his odious gang. Léa's hopes for a new life are torn apart
when Samy is shot dead by a policeman.
As she cradles her dying brother in her arms she thinks only of seeking
revenge. The object of her loathing is Koskas, a cop who is struggling
to bring up a nine-month-old baby and who has a habit of getting into trouble
with his superiors. He was panicked into shooting Samy whilst pursuing
him for drugs trafficking. Léa intends to get even with the
cop by kidnapping his precious offspring...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.