Film Review
Françoise Dorin's popular 1976 novel
Va voir maman, papa travaille
is effortlessly reworked as this engaging romantic comedy by the prolific
screenwriter Danièle Thompson, who went on to direct some fine films
of her own, notably
La Bûche
(1999) and
Fauteuils d'orchestre
(2006). Essentially a well-timed updating of Lelouch's
Un homme et une femme
for the late 1970s, the film concerns itself with a popular theme of the
time - whether women have the right to seek happiness in both their professional
and romantic lives. Thanks mainly to Thompson's deft writing,
Va
voir maman, papa travaille deals sensitively and thoughtfully with this
mine-strewn field of human experience and it stands as one of the writer's
career highlights.
The film's other winning assert is the inspired pairing of two icons of 1970s
French cinema - Marlène Jobert and Philippe Léotard.
In spite of their star status at the time, both actors had a flair for the
kind of understated naturalistic performance that made French cinema such
a worthy rival to Hollywood in the 1970s. Léotard had a particular
talent for wrapping a tough male persona around a heartbreaking inner vulnerability,
often to devastating effect for his audience. Likewise, Jobert makes
a superlative emblem of the modern liberated woman who is deeply conflicted
by her domestic responsibilities. It is the true-to-life and instantly
likeable contributions from these two gifted actors that makes
Va voir
maman such an involving and memorable film, even if the subject matter
now looks a tad dated and simplistic. Micheline Presle, Sylvie Joly
and Daniel Duval are welcome additions to a perfectly judged cast list, although
for the most part our attentions are completely monopolised by the two leads,
who have rarely been as good as they are here.
The film also marks a directorial highlight fot François Leterrier,
who is best known for his leading role in Robert Bresson's
Un condamné
à mort s'est échappé (1956). Leterrier
directed several films in the 1960s and '70s, including the engaging but
shallow hippy comedy-drama
Les Babas-cool
(1981) and the risible
Good-bye, Emmanuelle (1977). Served by
such a strong script and a complement of actors that could scarcely be improved
on, Leterrier could hardly fail to turn in one of the most humane and delightful
films of his career.
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next François Leterrier film:
Les Babas Cool (1981)
Film Synopsis
Agnès Lucas is a busy career woman in her mid-thirties who
finds fulfilment through her work as a decorator and still manages to find
time to bring up her seven-year old son, Jérôme. If only
her husband Serge was so conscientious on the domestic front. When
he isn't engrossed in his work, he prefers to while away his hours in the
company of his female friends. Agnès is enjoying a relaxing
excursion to a wildlife park with her son when she runs into Vincent, a middle-aged
divorcé with a young daughter. The two cannot help falling in
love. After an agreeable first meeting they soon become firm friends
and before she knows it Agnès is agreeing to help renovate a health
shop belonging to Vincent's sister. The carefree decorator is head
over heels in love before she realises that her personal happiness may come
at a terrible cost - the well-being of the son she adores. Just when
life has never seemed rosier, Agnès feels that she may soon have to
make a terrible choice. Surely she can't be a good mother and keep
the man she has lost her heart to...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.