Film Review
Vincent n'a pas d'écailles
promotes itself as France's first superhero film and one that is one
hundred per cent free of digital effects. It's a pitch that
sounds too good to be true but expectations of a crumby
Batman-on-a-shoestring abomination
are resolutely shot to pieces by what up-and-coming film auteur Thomas
Salvador lobs in our wary direction. It's actually an
anti-superhero film, about an ordinary-looking drifter (played by
Salvador himself) who, on discovering that by taking a shower he
becomes a cross-between the Bionic Man and the Man from Atlantis,
prefers to keep this to himself as he seeks out a modest life in sunny
Provence. Salvador's film is quirky, funny and poignant - all in
a refreshingly downbeat way - but, above all else, it is highly
original. You're unlikely ever to have seen a film quite like it,
and probably never will again.
This may be Thomas Salvador's first full-length film but he is no
stranger to cinema. He already has half a dozen short films to
his name, many of which have garnered considerable praise from the
critics, and his 2006 short
De Sortie
won him the prestigious Prix Jean-Vigo. Salvador's idiosyncratic
style of cinema defies a simplistic genre classification -
Vincent n'a pas d'écailles
is as much a piece of social realism as it is a sci-fi fantasy, a
romantic comedy as well as an adventure movie, but in fact it is all of
these things and none of them. It is the kind of film that
defines its own genre, as uniquely magical and poetic as the equally
unclassifiable films of Georges Méliès and Jacques Tati,
with literally nothing else to compare it with. You can if you
wish read a deeper philosophical meaning into the film, but Salvador
appears content to entertain with his weird powers of
invention.
Vincent n'a pas d'écailles
may have had a miserly sum of one and half million euros at its
disposal, but it looks sumptuous, primarily because it is set in one of
the most resplendent areas of France, the Gorges Du Verdon in Provence
in southeast France. Alexis Kavyrchine's stunning location
photography contributes much to the film's raw lyricism, making it a
celebration of the natural world as much as anything else. In the
sun-dappled lakes that seem to stretch on forever in this earthly
paradise, we have the wonderfully surreal spectacle of the central
protagonist flying in and out of the water like a humped-back whale on
steroids, a humorous allusion to
Free
Willy (1993) which has big payoff at the end of the film.
Through such vivid sequences, Vincent's intimate communion with Nature
is powerfully expressed - this is the film's spiritual core around
which Salvador constructs a smple but effective fable on the theme of
identity and integrity.
Salvador honours his promise not to resort to CGI trickery. All
of the effects that we see in the film are of the old-fashioned sort
that rely far more on ingenuity and sinew than technical wizardry, and
they are none the worse for that. Now that CGI has become so
sophisticated and endemic (almost to the point where physical sets, and
even real actors, have become virtually redundant) it's hard to believe
that the effects in Salvador's film were not realised digitally, yet
they were and they are incredibly realistic. Whether he's leaping
twenty feet into the air or surging across the Atlantic like a whale
propelled by jet turbines, Salvador convinces us that that his screen
alter ego is a man with genuine superhuman powers. The film may
have had a micro-budget, but its effects are comparable with, if not
better than, those of your average Hollywood blockbuster, and you can't
help wondering if laziness rather than a striving for better effects
has been the driving force behind the CGI revolution.
Salvador's film clearly owes something to the silent films of Buster
Keaton, and its self-effacing hero has a very Keaton-esque quality
about him, his attempts to lead a normal life endlessly frustrated by
events that force him to take to his heels and follow one death-defying
stunt with another. The gentle humour is tinged with poignancy as
Vincent's hopes of settling down to an ordinary life with a nice girl
(rising star Vimala Pons) are endlessly frustrated, first by his own
sense of loyalty to a work colleague which leads to an unfortunate
incident with a cement mixer, and then by the French gendarmerie, who
end up chasing him around Provence like a bad Keystone Cops tribute
act. Vincent's insistence that he does not have scales (meaning
he is a regular guy and not a freak) falls on deaf ears - even his
girlfriend has to check out for herself that he doesn't have webbed
feet.
With virtually no dialogue and nothing in the way of a score,
Vincent n'a pas d'ecailles is
practically a silent film, relying almost entirely on its visuals to
tell the story and suggest (rather than force) the appropriate
emotional response, which it does with considerable ease.
The unassuming, easy-going nature of the central protagonist is
reflected in the film as a whole, which makes a virtue of being
underplayed and unshowy but, in doing so, it risks passing without
being noticed. Thomas Salvador is not the kind of artist you'd
ever expect to see blowing his own trumpet (at least not too loudly) so
his debut feature may not find the audience it deserves.
Fortunate are they who are able to catch this pleasing little oddity at
it zips past, for it is assuredly one of the most sincere and original
French comedies in years.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
On the spur of the moment, Vincent leaves the city and heads south to
Provence in search of a new life. Here, he finds work as a
labourer on a construction site and takes time out to go swimming in
the region's bountiful lakes and rivers. It is whilst he is
indulging in his aquatic leisure pursuits that Vincent realises he has
acquired the strength of ten men. Not only can he swim like a
dolphin, he can also leap into the air higher than any man. These
new-found special powers last only whilst Vincent is in contact with
water, which is fortunate because his only desire is to live an
ordinary life. One day, he meets a young woman of his own age,
Lucie, and a mutual attraction soon develops, although Vincent is coy
about revealing his superhuman prowess to her. Vincent's summer
idyll is brought to a sudden close when he ends up on the wrong side of
the law after pushing a cement-mixer through a car windscreen.
Pursued by the police, the young man makes full use of his unwished for
powers to evade capture and begin a new life, in a land far
away...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.