52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 50. ARRÊTE TON CINÉMA (Director: Diane Kurys)
Arrête ton cinéma is
the third collaboration between actress Sylvie Testud and veteran director
Diane Kurys after 2008’s biopic Sagan
and 2013’s Pour une Femme (For a
Woman). Here, they have collaborated on the screenplay based on Testud’s book,
‘C’est le métier qui rentre’, a title that makes little sense in English: ‘It’s
the job that fits’ or ‘it’s the job that returns’ but here more like ‘it’s the
job that rebounds’; you take it on and it blows back in your face.
Testud plays Sybille, a successful in demand actress with an
abiding desire to direct her own autobiographical screenplay about three
sisters who discover who their father is whilst in hospital. Sybille signs a
contract with JRRP whose initials (in French) stand for ‘I never flop’ – a
motto more suited to the treatment for erectile dysfunction rather than a film
company. Her agent, Jack (François-Xavier Demaison) tells her to stay away from
the two women who run it (‘they’re crazy’) but Sybille climbs the marble
staircase in their grand town house anyway. The producers, Ingrid (Zabou
Breitman) and Brigitte (a silver-haired Josiane Balasko) are a couple who make
impossible demands – the first draft of a screenplay in two weeks; we shoot in
June. Their energy and forced enthusiasm are terrifying. Her agent warns her
that JRRP is always being sued. Indeed, the company name is practically a
guarantor of disappointment.
In Testud’s real experience, the producers were a
male-female couple – she declined to name them, perhaps fearing a lawsuit
herself. ‘But they are well known’ she
told an audience in London. The comedy comes from Sybille’s inability to resist
Ingrid and Brigitte’s increasingly desperate demands. Make no mistake: Ingrid
is as bad as Brigitte.
After turning in her screenplay, missing out on vacation
with her two children, Sybille is asked to make changes. Hospital is boring.
What about a horse farm? So Sybille takes her lead actress Julie (Claire Keim)
for riding lessons with predictably poor results; the horse throws her. Then
Ingrid takes a look at the re-write (‘boring, boring, boring’) and asks her to
change the sisters to escort girls. Sybille takes her husband Adrien (Fred
Testot) to a pole dancing club near the Moulin Rouge and fends off an escort
girl. They row afterwards. Imagine Sybille’s shock when she is awakened by
sounds downstairs and sees her husband in the kitchen with the escort girl. But
then the escort girl turns into Ingrid and it is just a dream.
Sybille’s two sisters work in a food van. One of them is
quite pleased that the profession of the sisters keeps changing ‘so no one will
recognise that it is us’. Kurys and Testud close down potential sources of
conflict, as even Adrian learns to accept that Sybille will be making her film.
The joke is that the content moves sharply away from an emotional story.
Brigitte decides to name it ‘Pretty Girls’ (the title is English rather than
French, the worst kind of insult) and the producers convince Sybille to shoot a
pop video with the three actress to promote the film, set to a 1970’s disco
song, ‘where are the women?’ by Patrick Juvet.
Testud has a physical presence best described as willowy –
you might think of Alyson Hannigan (‘How
I Met Your Mother’) when you see her. She looks like she has just stepped
out of the shower, cold and trembling, with eyes that have seen if not ghosts
then a lot of horror films. She is the opposite of imposing and that could be
part of the joke, that she is the least likely person to be ‘sought after’.
The film’s best character is JRRP’s petrified assistant,
Alphonse (Alban Casterman) who looks like an overgrown schoolboy given his
first job – he could even have been Brigitte’s son. Constantly ordered about,
he has little personality, as he is required to give Sybille a contract and an
access code for her script, to prevent the intellectual property from being
stolen. (The joke is that no one would steal it.)
Balasko plays Brigitte (surname Ceausescu, after the
Romanian former president) as a vain woman whose business negotiation borders
on the behaviour of a sexual predator. The meetings are short; she has another
film on the go. As her agent says, just because she goes to Cannes, it doesn’t
make her a successful producer. She also has ambitions on being an actress.
In the best scene, Brigitte takes Sybille to meet a
potential distributor only she is commanded to be quiet as Brigitte sells her
film as featuring glamorous women, comedy and action. The distributor sees
straight through her. At one point Brigitte and Ingrid have a conversation from
their holiday location by skype – Sybille is not allowed to have a holiday herself
– and Brigitte returns with a god-awful orange tan from an abused sun bed. In
the second best scene, Sybille convinces Julie that she is not right for the
film, only to be told by Brigitte not to fire her at all, as the preferred
actress is heavily pregnant. Sybille is forced to woo Julie back.
Some of the details are amusing, such as the sign Sybille’s
young son makes for his mother’s study to indicate whether she is working or
available for interruption. The unconditional devotion to the near absentee
mother is touching. The sticking point is that in order to make Sybille’s film
special, she must agree not to work for two years.
Arrête ton cinema
had an estimated budget of 5.7 million dollars and has only made 1 million
dollars at the box office to date. Although it boasts a popular comedy star
(Balasko) it has a niche subject. The most popular films by French women
directors of the last two years have been comedies, for example Alexandra
Leclère’s Le Grand Partage (The
Roommates Party), also featuring Josiane Balasko. The film describes how during
a cold winter poor people are forced to co-habit in an apartment block with
wealthy residents. However, these comedies don’t travel well, if at all – the
moderately popular sequel Joséphine
s’arrondit directed by Marilou Berry, Balasko’s daughter, hasn’t been
released in English speaking territories either.
The dilemma for women directors is whether to appeal to a
domestic audience or ‘go international’. In practice, it is dramas or thrillers
that translate better, though as Maryland
(Disorder) showed they can be completely overlooked in the blink of a short
release.
Arrête ton cinema
is unlikely to be released in the US or UK but may do well at festival
screenings with sufficiently good advertising. Kurys’ contribution is almost
anonymous. There is little to connect this to her 1977 international hit Diablo Menthe (Peppermint Soda) or her
1983 follow-up Coup de Foudre, the
latter also known as Entre Nous.
Reviewed at Screen on
the Green Islington, North London, Friday 1 July 2016, 20:30 seance, ‘The
French Collection’ weekend
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