Sunday, August 24, 2008

Un conte de Noël (A Christmas Tale)

Un conte de Noël (A Christmas Tale) (2008, Director: Arnaud Desplechin): Much like family life itself, Desplechin’s film about a pro­foundly dys­func­tional family coming together over the hol­i­days is chaotic, con­fusing, messy and a little bit infuri­ating at times. The dir­ector uses some very old melo­dra­matic gim­micks (iris effects, stagey inter­titles) and even has his actors address the audi­ence sev­eral times in an effort to provide the amount of expos­i­tion needed to keep this thing going. For me, it was only par­tially suc­cessful, and too much plot sum­mary here would threaten to blow up the word count expo­nen­tially. I’ll try to be concise.

Catherine Deneuve plays Junon, the rather chilly mat­ri­arch to three chil­dren. A fourth (the first­born) died of leuk­emia in child­hood, and his absence haunts the film, since the other chil­dren were con­ceived in a futile bid to find a bone marrow donor to save him. Now she has developed the same type of cancer and also needs a bone marrow trans­plant. The only two com­pat­ible donors are her son Henri (Mathieu Amalric), the family screw-up, and the teenage son of her daughter Elizabeth (Anne Consigny), who him­self is suf­fering after a mental break­down. To make mat­ters worse, Elizabeth “ban­ished” Henri from the family five years earlier, for reasons that seem unclear. There’s plenty of other family intrigue at work as well and no one comes off as wholly sym­path­etic. Despite that, I was heartened that by the end there had been some tent­ative (re)connections formed.

It felt to me very much like Un conte de Noël was a melo­drama trying to both poke fun at its melo­dra­matic ele­ments and rise above them. There was some fine ensemble acting (Deneuve and Amalric stand out in par­tic­ular), and a few clever med­ical meta­phors (Junon’s family fear that her body will “reject” Henri’s marrow, in the same way Elizabeth fears Henri’s “pois­onous” influ­ence on her son; Junon doesn’t trust marrow from Elizabeth’s “crazy” son), but overall the film left me a bit under­whelmed, espe­cially in light of its 140 minute length.

Trailer (en fran­cais)
Official site of the film (en francais)

7/10(7/10)

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