Dreaming of a French Christmas
Dont drown, says Faunia (Emmanuelle Devos) to Henri (Mathieu Almaric), who is drowning in misery over his unsatisfying relationship with his haughty sister. Faunia assures him: You have no family. Thats because girlfriend Faunia is a specter from the haute-soap opera world of Arnaud Desplechin where the usual love sentiments are replaced by distrust, suspicion, negativityall the things hipsters think are new. Faunia is an ungrateful guest at Henris holiday family reunion in A Christmas Tale, which is the latest pretext for director Arnaud Desplechin to wax ironic.
Why is Desplechin worshipped by the gatekeepers of contemporary film culture? The answer is annoyingly apparent in A Christmas Tale, where Desplechin glamorizes a haute-bourgeois French family, serving up domestic banalities with more than a soupon of intellectual loftiness. The Vuillard clan discusses medicine, religion, psychosis, racism, sex, T.S. Eliot, Shakespeare and, in one extended scene, works a long algebra equation on several chalkboards. It takes place at a baronial house with a large garden. Its just bigger and better-appointed than American movies telling similar home-for-the-holiday tales.
This is not to deny Desplechins filmmaking efforts. Hes all about le cinema; mixing devices such as puppet-show silhouettes, rear-projections, iris-framed compositions, graphics super-imposed over dissolves and photo-montageseven including a musical-medley soundtrack from classical to jazz. This movie drowns in high-tone, pseudo-avant-garde fanciness. But if you can see past itand thats the challenge for nave filmgoersthe attenuated stories and flashes of nihilism, like Faunias deadly advice, are pretty empty.
At first, Desplechins fussily contrived history of the Vuillards resembles a fairy tale: Princessy Junon (the ever-imperious Catherine Deneuve) marries the frog-like Abel (rotund, wide-eyed Jean-Paul Roussillon). Desplechin tracks the death of the Vuillards sickly first child (via the above-described narrative tricks which recall Jean-Pierre Jeunets Amelie but without the capricious sense of fun). Then comes the quick, disheartened addition of three more children whom Desplechin introduces as adults: the dishonest banker Henri, playwright Elizabeth (Anne Consigny), and family mascot Ivan (Melvil Poupaud) whose life is charmed. All smart, good-looking and articulate, yet the Vuillards yet seem cursedby the specters of death (when Junon is diagnosed as needing a bone marrow transplant) and by Desplechins pomposity. Instead of dramatizing a straight-forward, stressful reunion, Desplechin orbits around the relationships film-school-style: characters read letters addressing the audience or offer interior monologues, highlighting overwrought discord and overabundant magnanimity. This makes the movie long, but not profound.
Exceedingly art-conscious, Desplechin does tireless visual experimentation. He rejects conventional narrative economy, yet he also lacks grandeur. Todays film geeks misperceive his specious innovations as an advance over the 1960s New Wave. Fact is, Desplechin has resurrected the old Tradition of Quality, updating exactly the sort of dry, bourgeois sex dramas the New Wave repudiated. When Faunia depresses Henri, or Junon teases him with motherly disdain, or Ivan gallantly permits his wife (Chiara Mastroianni) to requite her affair with his cousin Simon (Laurent Capelluto), the radical acts only superficially address modern anxiety. At heart its all mawkish.
A Christmas Tale isnt repugnant, just regressive. The modern family film has moved beyond this Gallic update of I Remember Mama. (Desplechin peddles the class and intellectual superiority of European art-movie chic that Woody Allen envied in Bergmans Fanny and Alexander and attempted to rip-off in Hannah and Her Sisters). My own hopes sank from the opening scene of Pere Vuillard tending his first childs grave in a vast cemetery. It couldnt match that astonishing cemetery sequence in Patrice Chereaus domestic-social masterpiece Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train where an extended family illustrated the problems of the modern world. More recently, Thomas Bezuchas The Family Stone specifically addressed the impact of social change on contemporary American family habit. (Bezucha used a Christmastime TV broadcast of Minnellis Meet Me in St. Louis to measure the depths of modern nostalgia; Desplechins TV clips of The Ten Commandments, Funny Face and A Midsummer Nights Dream are a mere conceit.)
Already this year, Jonathan Demmes Rachel Getting Married, André Téchinés The Witnesses and Marcos Siegas Chaos Theory offered more aesthetically adventurous insights into complicated family relations. By the time Desplechin finally works past Faunias hip cynicismemphasizing the creature comforts of typically French progressivesits as if hes been looking at Eugene ONeills conflicted family dramas from the idiots end of a telescope. -- A Christmas Tale Directed by Arnaud Desplechin, at IFC Center, Running Time: 150 min. --