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The thoroughly conformist world of Amelie
By Stefan Steinberg
28 August 2001
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Le fabuleux destin dAmélie Poulain [The
extraordinary fate of Amelie Poulain] is the most recent film
by French film director Jean-Pierre Jeunet, whose previous works
include Delicatessen (1991), The City of Lost Children
(1995) and the fourth Alien remake Alien: Resurrection
(1997). Following its rejection for programme inclusion by the
director of this years Cannes Film Festival, Amelie
(as his new film is being called in English) has enjoyed a meteoric
success in French cinemas with a viewing public of nearly eight
million since its release in May. It has just opened in Germany
to largely gushing reviews that invariably note that both French
Prime Minister Lionel Jospin and President Jacques Chirac have
made a point of seeing and enthusing about the film.
Jean-Pierre Jeunet has a talent for translating everyday events
into compelling images. His initial background as a filmmaker
was in cartoons and animation film, and it shows. Separated from
Jeunets pyrotechnical imagery, the figures and characters
in his films remain schematic and unconvincing, while the moral
of Amelie is simply banal. Nevertheless the attendance
figures for his film indicates he has hit a nerve with the public.
It is worth exploring why this is so.
Amelie begins with the juxtaposition of a series of
unconnected, everyday images. We witness a fly being run over
by a car, switch abruptly to drinking glasses dancing on a white
cloth being blown by the wind, and then a man rubbing out the
telephone number from his address book of a friend who has just
died. Under a microscope a sperm embeds itself into an eggwe
are witnessing the conception of the films main character,
Amelie.
In a hectic series of intricately compiled images we speed
through the infancy and childhood of Amelie. Her father is a doctor
incapable of real affection and physical warmth. The only time
he touches his child is in the course of a routine examination
he makes once a month. Aroused by the rare bodily nearness of
her father during one such examination, Amelies young heart
races. Pressing his stethoscope to her chest the father concludes
that the girl has a heart defect and proceeds to wall her off
from the external world. Later we encounter Amelie (Audrey Tautou)
as a shy, introverted woman in her middle twenties working in
a bar in Montmartre.
All of Jeunets characters in Amelie are semi-proletarian,
but far removed from what might be regarded as ordinary. They
possess a surplus of foibles, weaknesses and endearing eccentricities:
the one-armed boy working for the greengrocer who is so tender
and respectful to the fruit and vegetables he handles, the elderly
artist neighbour suffering from brittle bone disease who every
year paints a copy of the same picture, as well as Amelie herself,
of course, and her colleagues and customers in the bar where she
works.
The world of politics and power is alien and far removed. Amelie
goes to a newspaper stand to buy a paper. It is the start of September
1997, one day after the violent death of Princess Diana in a Paris
car crash. The Princess Di headlines and story dominate the pages
of all papersas well as the billboards. It is useless to
look for any other news. With a sweep Jeunet has established an
important pre-condition for his fabulous but also
very hermetic world of Amelie, where there is nothing better to
concentrate on than the peregrinations of the films heroine
in her entirely predictable search for true love.
Jeunets Paris is a thoroughly sanitised version of the
real thingParis inside the periferique
(the ring road around the city)clean, tidy, free from honking
cars, tourists, too many foreigners and other complications. The
action is concentrated in a Paris bar situated at the heart of
Montmartrethe famous and picturesque haunt of artists and
writers at the start of the twentieth century. The Metro stations
are tidy, the advertising placards on the walls are artistic and
very French. One has the impression that Jeunet went to great
lengths to ensure that no poster for a Hollywood film disturbed
his background shots of scenes played out in Pariss central
railway station Gare de lEst. In another scene in the film
we are treated to nostalgic black and white newsreel footage of
a Tour de France cycle race. This is very evidently a Paris and
France before globalisation, performance-enhancing drugs and McDonalds
fast-food restaurants ever happened.
Even the beggars are happy with their lot in such an idyllic
Paris and bear their fate with dignity. As Amelie rushes to catch
a train on Sunday she stops to donate a few Francs to a tramp
slumped against a railing with his dog. Non, merci!
he says, rejecting the donation, I never work on Sundays.
Upon the insistence of her elderly artist neighbour Amelie
discovers that if she interferes and makes small changes to the
environment of the people around her, then it is possible to make
significant changes to their lives. She removes her fathers
garden gnome from its shrine in his garden and sends it on a trip
round the world. The father, who has never travelled in his life,
takes up the example of his gnome, packs his bags and sets off
to see the world. With similar means Amelie is able to bring a
shimmer of romance into the life of a spinster fellow worker.
Now Amelie is confronted with the most difficult task of allovercoming
her own inhibitions to snare the man of her dreams.
According to Jeunet the world is a vast mesh of barely comprehensible
causes and effects which defy any sort of meaningful change on
a large scale. Nevertheless opportunities do arise whereby the
individual can initiate changes in lifes fabric with dramatic
consequences. As one character comments; life is like the Tour
de France, blink at the wrong moment and you miss it. In fact
the films message is thoroughly trite and familiarthe
world is full of wonder and mystery, keep your senses alert, your
eyes open for opportunities and maybe you can overcome the tawdry
fate that awaits most of mankind.
In interviews Jeunet emphasises his desire, together with a
new generation of French directors, to liberate French cinema
from what he terms the intellectual garbage of the
French Nouvelle Vague and contemporary French realist
cinema, which he describes as badly written, badly filmed,
as stupid as life itself. In fact, Jeunet confuses two very
different genres and periods when he lumps together the French
New Wave and much contemporary French realist film.
Despite the unevenness of much of their work, French New Wave
directors in the 1960s, drawing from the cinematic traditions
in America and neo-realist cinema in Italy, were able to produce
a host of thoughtful, provocative films which cast a wry, critical
glance at modern society. The crisis of much modern French realist
film has very much to do with broad ideological sentiments. A
number of contemporary French filmmakers (e.g., Bruno Dumont)
recognise and feel compelled to comment on the howling injustices
and inhumanity in modern capitalist society, but they lack confidence
in a political alternative which would allow them to step back
and approach their subject with more consideration and objectivity.
Jeunets response to modern societyafter all the
French Republic has been shaken recently by a series of profound
political and financial scandals and political support for the
ruling parties is at an historically low ebbis to turn his
back on all of it in favour of recreating a by-gone French wonderland
which was in fact never that wonderful. Amelie is, all
in all, despite the gags and visual fireworks, a thoroughly conformist
film.
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