Film Review
After a decade in which he has notched up almost twice as many
critical failures as successes, you'd be forgiven for thinking that
Patrice Leconte's career as a filmmaker is in a state of terminal
decline. Certainly, his last three films have done little for his
reputation. Going by the facile
Les Bronzés 3 - amis pour la vie
(2006) (God alone knows how this managed to draw an audience of ten
million) and the pretty execrable
La Guerre des miss (2009), it
would seem that the old Leconte magic has well and truly run its
course. This might explain why, for his latest film, Patrice
Leconte has performed a wholesale snatch and grab raid on his earlier
successes -
Tandem (1987),
Le Mari de la coiffeuse (1990)
and
Tango
(1993) - in a desperate bid to revive his flagging creativity.
But, as the poet said, if you can't plagiarise yourself, who can you
plagiarise?
Voir la mer is certainly a
more laudable film than Leconte's past few offerings, a conventional
road movie which explores the conflict between friendship and desire
from a quintessentially Gallic perspective. The film is hardly
groundbreaking - at times, it seems to be a blatant homage of Bertrand
Blier's
Les Valseuses (1974) (albeit
one that neatly sidesteps Blier's penchant for seedy black humour) - but its lack
of originality does not prevent it from being an engaging piece of
lighthearted nonsense. The film would probably have been better
received than it has been if the road movie genre hadn't already been
pretty well mined out in France in recent years. Sebastien
Lifshitz's
Plein Sud (2009) and
Pascal-Alex Vincent's
Donne-moi la main (2009) cover
the same ground more authentically than Leconte, who consequently ends
up looking like a derelict struggling to climb aboard a bandwagon that
has already left town. Despite this, the genre does allow Leconte
to play to his strengths and the film does have some pleasing echoes of
his earlier films, through its distinctive blend of sensual poetry and
laidback humour.
Nicolas Giraud and Clément Sibony are terrific as the two main
protagonists, a pair of chalk-and-cheese brothers whose amusing
interplay amply makes up for the lack of substance in the
narrative. Completing the cute ménage-a-trois is former TV
presenter and weather girl Pauline Lefèvre, coping reasonably
well in her first substantial screen role. It is mainly thanks to
this youthful and likeable cast that the film manages to keep itself
going and avoids stalling like the clapped out banger it is through its
manifest lack of content and ambition.
Voir la mer falls way short of
being a masterpiece but it is not without charm. Whilst it may
struggle to hold its own when set aside Leconte's previous great films
(many of which are now undisputed classics of French cinema), it does
bear its author's unmistakable imprint and does not insult the
intelligence of the spectator - which is more than can be said for most
of the films he has churned out over the past decade. Perhaps we
shouldn't give up on Patrice Leconte just yet. There's still life in
the
vieux chien.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Patrice Leconte film:
Le Magasin des suicides (2012)
Film Synopsis
Nicolas and Clément, two brothers from Montbard, Burgundy,
decide to spend their summer holidays with their mother at
Saint-Jean-de-Luz. Once they have acquired a second-hand
campervan, they take to the road in a mood of fraternal bonhomie.
The last thing the two brothers expected was to come across an
attractive young woman named Prudence who would inflame their passions
and get them to change their itinerary. As the trio head for the
coast, they savour the adventures that lie ahead. Who says
pleasures cannot be shared?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.