Film Review
Philippe de Broca's final film is this adaptation of Hervé Bazin's first, autobiographical
novel. Although he is remembered for some classic French films -
L'Homme de Rio (1964),
Le Roi de Coeur (1966) and
Le Bossu (1997) to name just three - De Broca
has also turned out a fair number of turkeys, most notably the risible
Amazone (2000). Whilst
Vipère
au poing doesn't quite plumb the depths of De Broca's worst films, it is a long,
long way from being his best work.
The main reason why the film disappoints is because it focuses too much on the humorous
elements of Bazin's story and almost completely overlooks the tragic dimension.
There are plenty of opportunities for De Broca to make this either a very disturbing film
or a very poignant film, but somehow these just pass him by and all we get is a rather
puerile depiction of childhood rebellion, the Mark Twain version of Truffaut's
Les
400 coups. When the narrative does finally get round to explaining why Jean's
mother is such a monster, it does so in a way that is totally unconvincing - concertinaed
into the last ten minutes of the film, with the most schmaltzy dialogue you can imagine
performed by actors who look as if they graduated from drama school at least two years
too early. It looks as if De Broca had had enough and just gave up.
This is a pity because the first half of the film isn't too bad, even if it feels more
like end-of-the-pier pantomime than film drama (every time Catherine Frot appears you
have an uncontrollable urge to boo and hiss, and not just because she is miscast).
Jacques Villeret gives another of his sympathetic performances as a slightly nutty collector
of insectoid life - his scenes are the most enjoyable in the film. Far less successful
are the contributions from the child actors, who are either badly cast, under-rehearsed
or just badly directed. Jules Sitruk (the child lead who crops up in this kind of
role with alarming regularity) is particularly aggravating, bringing virtually no credibility
to his portrayal of the victimised Jean. Not only does he fail to convey any sense
of malice or hurt, but you rather end up feeling that his character actually deserves
the brutality that gets meted out to him.
This is the kind of film which probably
has far more appeal to children than to adults - pre-teens won't be quite so offended
by the film's superficiality and should find it easier to engage with the child characters
(who, from an adult perspective are grotesquely caricatured). The production
values are also rather good - the film captures the period in which the story is set (between
the wars) well, both in the design and the staging. If only De Broca had given more
attention to characterisation and had focussed more on the pathos of Bazin's novel, the
film would have had much greater appeal.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Philippe de Broca film:
L'Amant de cinq jours (1961)
Film Synopsis
In middle-age, Jean Rezeau recalls his eventful childhood, beginning with the death of
his grandmother in 1926. Hitherto, Jean and his elder brother Freddie had enjoyed
a happy life in the family's country estate, cherished by their grandmother and their
servants. All this was to change when their mother and father returned from Indochina
to take charge of their upbringing. Jean and his mother take an immediate dislike
to one another, the former's rebellious spirit merely aggravating the latter's tyrannical
tendencies. Unable to put up with his mother's cruel regime any longer, Jean is
determined that she should die...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.