Film Review
Although slightly marred by a tendency for excessive silliness in
places,
Un ticket pour l'espace
is a pretty respectable parody of the latest generation of American
sci-fi adventure movie. The film reunites Kad Merad and Olivier
Barroux who had made an effective, and extremely popular, double act in
director Eric Lartigau's previous film,
Mais qui a tué Pamela Rose?
Merad and Barroux are easily the best thing about this film; they not
only give us the best laughs, but also manage to invest some measure of
realism in their characters - thereby preventing the film from ending
up as a self-indulgent mass of plot contrivance and cheap laughs.
Guillaume Canet is pretty good too, playing arch villainy in a way that suggests
he may be a graduate of the Anthony Perkins schoool of creepiness.
French cinema has traditionally shied away from science-fiction,
although the availability of affordable effects technology and the
increasing popularity of the genre in France appear to be changing
that.
Un ticket pour l'espace
has the kind of Hollywood blockbuster production values that would have
been unimaginable in a French film a decade ago. It is to the
credit of its production team that the special effects are not
over-used and are there to support the narrative rather than, as is so
often the case these days, to serve as a substitute for a weak
storyline.
With its zany comedy and attractive cast,
Un ticket pour l'espace has the
makings of a cult classic. Yes, some of the sci-fi concepts are
ludicrously silly - but this is
parody,
not Ray
Bradbury. Even
if a few of the jokes misfire, there are plenty more that hit their
mark. And there's plenty of fun to be had spotting the plethora
of references to American sci-fi movies of the past three decades - the
most obvious being a turkey-flavoured send-up of Ridley Scott's
Alien (1979), which will definitely
put you off your Christmas dinner...
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Eric Lartigau film:
L'Homme qui voulait vivre sa vie (2010)
Film Synopsis
Lack of support from a tax weary French public threatens to jeopardise
France's programme of space research. The head of the research
team, Simon Werburger, comes up with an idea to raise the necessary
funding - a new scratch card which will offer two ordinary French
citizens the chance to spend a fortnight aboard the space
station. Although the scheme is a success, the man charged
with piloting the shuttle to the space station, Beaulieu, refuses to
take part in what he considers to be a cynical marketing ploy. He
changes his mind when he learns that Soizic, the woman he worships, has
been assigned to the mission. The two winners are
announced. They are Stéphane Cardoux, a failed actor whose
wife has just left him, and Alexandre Yonis, whose keenness and
preparedness for the mission soon appear suspicious. Beaulieu
ultimately recognises Yonis as one of his former colleagues who has a
deadly grudge against him - but too late. Yonis has managed to
take control of the space station's control systems and intends to send
it crashing into France unless his brother - a notorious serial killer
- is released from prison…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.