J'Attends
Quelqu'un, a sweet little film written and directed by Jérôme
Bonnell, proves that the classic prescription for good writing –
show, don’t tell - is also a great rule for screenwriting.
Its lack of exposition and explanation is positively refreshing.
Luckily, Bonnell,
who is only 30 years old, has the talent to make his story clear
by just showing. J'Attends Quelqu'un, his third feature
film, is set in a small town in France. Louis (Jean-Pierre Darroussin)
owns the Cafe de la Paix (every French town has one), where all
of the characters eventually show up. Something of a lecher (he
is always trying to grab the ass of his waitress and any other attractive
woman who gets in his way), he has been frequenting the local hooker,
Sabine (Florence Loiret) for so long that they have established
a comfortable friendship. His sister Agnès (Emmanuelle Devos),
a schoolteacher, is married to Jean-Philippe (Eric Caravaca), a
journalist who is a sweetheart of a guy but has a bad case of hypochondria.
Running through
this simple story of the interactions and incidents in the everyday
lives of these rather ordinary people is a mystery that adds an
uneasy element of suspense: Who is the young hitchhiker who arrived
in town at the beginning of the film and why has he been watching
the house of a young couple with a baby?
This impeccably
acted film (although Emmanuelle Devos overdoes the giggling; she
is a wonderful actress but can sometimes be annoyingly overpresent)
unfolds in a most natural and appealing manner. These are people
we like in spite of their faults because they are shown from enough
angles and in enough different situations to make them fully rounded
characters.
My only complaint
about this little gem is that the ending is a bit too neat, as if
the director were afraid to trust his instinct for realism.
Heidi
Ellison
© 2007
Paris Update
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