Film Review
With four full-length films to his name, novelist-turned-director
Philippe Claudel has yet to live up to the promise of his debut feature
Il y a longtemps que je t'aime
(2008). After the star-studded
Avant
l'hiver (2013), Claudel appears to be slumming it in his
latest feature
Une enfance, a
scrappy portrait of early adolescence at the lower end of the social
spectrum that is late in clambering aboard the bandwagon set in motion
by the Dardenne brothers with their 2011 hit
Le
Gamin au vélo. Claudel's belated foray into
social realism suffers by comparison with the spate of similar films
following on from the Dardennes' kid-with-a-bike crowdpleaser, notably
Edward Berger's
Jack (2014)
and Emmanuelle Bercot's
La Tête haute (2015),
both of which deal with the subject matter in a far more authentic and
involving manner.
The fact that Claudel chose to situate his film in the small industrial
town where he grew up - Dombasle in the suburbs of Nancy - lends it a
personal touch, but the writer-director seems visibly disconnected from
the subject of his film. Instead of a sincere portrait of a child
coping with the brutality of life on the margins - in the manner of Ken
Loach's
Kes
(1969) - what Claudel serves up feels more like a recycled mass of
clichés, and rather than engage with his socially inferior
characters, he seems to look down on them with disdain, as if they were
vermin wallowing in their own filth. The grown-up characters are
pure archetypes - the alcoholic mother who totally ignores her
children, her layabout druggie boyfriend, the sympathetic
schoolteacher... Oddly, the only adult character who rings true
is a tennis coach played by Claudel himself. Almost the entire
weight of the film falls on its lead actor Alexi Mathieu, who copes
admirably in his first screen role as the tenacious and well-rounded
thirteen-year-old Jimmy, with whom we develop an ambivalent rather than
sympathetic interest.
In spite of a script that feels like a hastily cobbled together
cut-and-paste job, as lacking in structure as it is in originality,
Mathieu's charismatic presence somehow holds
Une enfance together and gives it
an emotional resonance which it barely deserves. There's hardly a
scene in the film that does not come across as second-hand and laboured
- it's as stereotypical a view of life at the bottom of the social heap
as you can imagine. It is hard to take seriously Claudel's
proclaimed intention of making this a first in a series of films
following Jimmy's journey to maturity, in a similar vein to
François Truffaut's
Antoine Doinel cycle.
Claudel's own
400 coups is
borderline pedestrian, peddling out-dated notions of social determinism
instead of coming to grips with the underlying social issues,
half-heartedly toying with our emotions without bothering to develop
real characters and giving us a genuine sense of what life is like for
people in their predicament. Flawed as it is,
Une enfance still has its charms
and in one or two scenes its grotesquely simulated concern does seem to
turn into the real thing, but for the most part it is too heavy-handed
and artificial to have much of an impact. You are almost ready to
forgive the film its shortcomings when Claudel bolts on a final plot
twist that makes you want to howl with disappointment.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In a small industrial town in the east of France, 13-year-old Jimmy has
already put his childhood behind him as he takes charge of his
impoverished household. Neglected by his alcoholic mother and
constantly abused by her lazy, drug-addicted boyfriend Duke, it falls
upon him to look after his younger brother Kevin and ensure that all
the household chores get done. Meanwhile, he struggles at school
and is already two years behind. Jimmy's future is far from
promising...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.