One sniffy star is all Jenny thinks it's worth
My Persian cat is a
fine sniffer-out of anything slightly ‘off’. He wrinkles his sweet but rather
flat nose and I can see that a judgement is coming. My own nose was wrinkling
as soon as Joe, my co-blogger pitched the idea of going to see François Ozon's Frantz. ‘This grieving German girl finds
a strange young Frenchman standing at the grave of her dead soldier fiancé in
1919 and he gets to know her family.’ In a flash I correctly guessed two thirds
of the allegedly Hitchcockian plot. I don’t like doing this. I don’t like
watching bloopers, poor screenwriting and films that are too long because no
one had the time to make them shorter. It destroys my willingness to believe
that what I’m watching is not a film at all but something gripping and real.
Unfortunately there
was so much of all of this in Frantz.
First, it’s full of plot holes: how did Adrien (Pierre Niney), the French
soldier track down the angry and bereft German family given the flimsy evidence
he possessed? How did he know about Frantz’s pre war interests? Then there are
all those little give-away details of a director too distracted to notice the
give-away details: for instance, a supposedly full tureen of food is plonked on
a table when the noise of the plonking shows clearly that it is empty.
Then
there is the scene where the hero impulsively swims in a lake, clad only in his
longjohns; a stand-in might have done the swim with more elegant strokes instead
of the undignified doggy paddle that we saw. After this, lounging sexily on the
bank, his thick cotton underwear has seemingly dried out in seconds even though
his body is still gleaming attractively with lake water. The whole scene would
surely have been extremely unlikely in 1919. The extras have the awkward air of
hastily recruited locals told to do a bit of walking up and down in the
background. The editing seems perfunctory - so many unnecessary shots of people
opening doors, coming in and out of rooms. At 20 minutes shorter it could have
been a much better film.
The actors do their
best. Pierre Niney plays the French hero – his extraordinary nose and silly
moustache deserved a credit all of their own. Paula Beer is elegant and more
aristocratic than the part deserves as Anna, the bereaved fiancée.
But my real
nose-twitching was about a director claiming to be an Auteur when maybe he is
just a workaday storyteller. Can you make a serious film heavily freighted with
symbolism and deep meaning if you are not driven by authentic passion for the
subject? I don’t think so and I didn’t believe for a moment in the authentic
passion. I saw a film where the director was in love with style, with his
terribly sophisticated choice of colour-corrected black and white as the
medium, with his cleverness in devising parallel scenes of nationalistic
stupidity and prejudice, with little speeches about the futility of war. I
didn’t want to see the train shots – on a
journey, geddit? I was not gripped by the last two reels. These were some
kind of low-energy detective story which seemed to belong in a different film.
Slow, implausible,
hastily stitched together. What’s to like?
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