52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 51. LOLO (Director: Julie Delpy)
Actress Julie Delpy (born December 1969) is excelling at her
second career as writer-director. Lolo,
in which she stars opposite Dany Boon, France’s answer to [insert contemporary
comedy legend here], is her sixth feature film as director. The best known of
her films is 2 Days in Paris (2007)
in which she starred opposite Adam Goldberg – she directed the sequel 2 Days in New York with Chris Rock,
five years later. Although her work behind the camera is broadly comedic, she
made one genre film, The Countess (2009),
in which she played the blood-sucking Countess Bathory opposite Daniel Brühl.
It is a throwback to Hammer horror films – it was a horror all right, sorely
lacking in ‘a strong coherent vision and sense of purpose’ (Boyd van Hoeji,
Variety); ‘it neither terrifies nor illuminates’ (Kirk Honeycutt, Hollywood
Reporter). Having got her first screenwriter credit collaboration on Richard
Linklater’s ‘Before’ trilogy – Before
Sunrise, Before Sunset, Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead, sorry, Before
Midnight (all four star Ethan Hawke, spot the odd one out) - Delpy has even
earned an Oscar nomination for her pains for Before Midnight.
Delpy’s highest grossing film as director is 2 Days in Paris (19.8 million USD)
which clearly sent her a message: keep the concept simple. So in Lolo, she has fashioned a ménage a
trois: a man, a woman and the woman’s precocious teenage son (Vincent Lacoste,
star of Les Beaux Gosses).
After some lively animated credits, Delpy takes us to an
indoor swimming pool where Violette (Delpy) and her best friend, Ariane (Karin
Viard) talk about sexual pleasure and lack thereof – well, there is always the
wave machine. The pair catch the eye of two men, one of whom Jean-Rene (Boon)
has recently moved to Paris. He has an excellent view of the Eiffel Tower from
his apartment – well, the tip of it. Jean-Rene dumps a large tuna fish on
Violette’s lap during a poolside barbecue, but she doesn’t let that put her
off. They start dating. But Jean-Rene doesn’t reckon on the determination of
Violette’s son Lolo (Lacoste) to put him off.
The comedy is broad, revolving on Lolo sprinkling
Jean-Rene’s clothes with itching powder. The red sores resemble a sexually
transmitted disease – trichomoniasis, one of the characters in 300 - I think one in 300 get it - or a
more common STD, a poor credit rating. At a fashion show attended by Karl
Lagerfeld, Lolo puts a tranquiliser in Jean-Rene’s drink. He persuades two
girlfriends to sleep in Jean-Rene’s bed so Violette can discover them together.
In his worst act, Lolo’s friend infects Jean-Rene’s computer with a violent,
anti-capitalist virus.
Jean-Rene is amazingly tolerant. The tension is whether
Violette can wean her son off her unconditional love and do something with his
life.
According to Allocine, an authoritative French website, 100
critics gave Lolo three stars. Not
terrible, but not great either. The parts stretch neither actor. Violette is an
accomplished director of fashion shows. Jean-Rene is eager to please though not
a convincing IT nerd. This is Hollywood likeableness.
There is an expectation from foreign critics that French
comedies have to be sophisticated. Not so, they just have an emotional core. I
believed that this kid didn’t want to share his mother with anyone else; that
way he can stay at home as long as he wants and doesn’t have to grow up. It
doesn’t have to be an Oedipus relationship, rather more redolent of a slacker.
In the UK, children are forced to live with their parents for longer to raise
enough money for a deposit. But it is criminally hard for young people to enter
the housing market. The Iraq War was not the only thing Labour Prime Minister
Tony Blair got wrong; he allowed the housing market to become unaffordable.
As the Before
trilogy showed, Delpy is at her best playing characters close to herself – or
our perception of her as a chatty, opinionated French woman and mother. But for
her next comedy, she should take a few risks by having less than likeable
protagonists. She has stated that she does not intend to star in her next film
as director, but needs must.
Reviewed at ‘The French Connection’, Sunday 3 July 2016, Everyman Hampstead, North London, 19:00 screening
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
Comments
Post a Comment