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From The Independent in the UK:
If any country is in desperate need of a feel-good film this
Christmas, it is an angry, struggling France. If any cinema industry is
in need of a box-office office triumph after a flat 2013-14, it is the
French cinema industry.
The advance buzz for La Famille Bélier, which opened across France
tonight, has been extraordinary. "Here is a film that makes you laugh,
makes you think and occasionally makes you cry," said the newspaper, Le
Parisien.
Even before it opened, based on advance viewings and
test screenings in the provinces, the movie was predicted to be the next
big French hit, following in the steps of The Artist (2011),
Intouchables (2011) and Amélie (2001). On the basis of the trailer
alone, the film has been sold to 85 countries. A Hollywood remake is
planned.
The film tells the story of a deaf-and-mute farming
family with a 17-year-old daughter who can not only hear and speak but
sing, beautifully. Paula Bélier's decision to leave home to become a
professional singer is a sweet calamity for her parents. Their daughter
is their mouth and ears. They want her to succeed but cannot comprehend
her talent.
Advance acclaim for the film has, however, fallen on
deaf ears in one constituency in France: the five million French people
who have hearing difficulties and the 500,000 who cannot hear at all.
Some – but not all – activists for the deaf are angry that two
well-known actors with perfect hearing were cast to play Paula's parents
who are Deaf Sign Language users. They also complain that the deaf
characters are the main source of comedy in the film.
Karin Viard
(who plays Paula's mother, Gigi Bélier) and François Damiens (her
father, Rodolphe Bélier) were given a crash course in sign language. The
results to those fluent in signing are said to be absurd, as if James
Bond were to say "shaken not stirred" in a deep Russian accent.
"The
actors sign like pigs," said Emmanuelle Laborit, a deaf French actress,
who is director of the International Visual Theatre. "It is as if they
were foreigners who can't speak French properly. Would we allow actors
to black up to play a black character?"
Several senior figures in the French deaf community have decided to
boycott the film. Hélène Champroux, who campaigns for French sub-titles
in French cinemas, was disturbed by what she saw at an advance showing.
"All the deaf characters are over the top. The hearing characters are
more normal. Why is that?" she asked.
Other deaf people disagree,
vehemently. They say that the comical body language of the actors
accurately conveys the way that people with impaired hearing sometimes
have to exaggerate their movements to be understood.
Viguen
Shirvanian, a deaf cinema critic, says: "I found François Damiens
especially to be astonishingly believable in his gestures. There is
nothing shocking in casting non-deaf actors. Did anyone complain when
François Cluzet played a paraplegic in Intouchables?"
Karin Viard
is a popular comedy actress in France and often plays nervous,
in-your-face characters. Her portrait of Paula's mother Gigi – an
aggressive, funny, emotional woman with a heart of gold – is a typical
Viard performance.
She makes no apology to her deaf critics. "Deaf
people don't go in for politeness and diplomacy," she says. "They are
like energetic clowns, who use their bodies to express themselves. Just
like me."
Both Viard and the Belgian actor François Damiens have
won high praise for their performances from hearing critics and
filmgoers. So has Louane Emera, the 18-year-old newcomer who plays Paula
Bélier.
The film's director, Eric Lartigau, had great difficulty
in finding a young French actress who could also sing. A friend advised
him to look at tapes of The Voice, the French version of the television
talent show also seen on UK screens.
He stumbled on Emera, from a
large working-class family in norhern France, who was eliminated in the
2013 semi-final. Lartigau went to see her the following day and told her
that she was starring in his next film. She accepted enthusiastically.
The other star of La Famille Bélier does not even appear in the film
– Michel Sardou, an ageing, middle-of-the-road French crooner who is
scarcely known outside the Francophone world. The music teacher who
recognises Paula's talent (played by Eric Elmosnino) is an unconditional
Sardou fan.
He tells his doubting class: "Michel Sardou is to
French song what Mozart was to classical music." All the numbers sung by
Paula – in a raw but beautiful voice – are Sardou classics. The most
moving – "Je Vole" (I am flying) – is about a young person leaving home
and moving on, just like Paula Bélier.
Whatever British
cinemagoers make of the film next year, they will reach for their
hankies in their thousands when Emera as Paula is asked by her deaf,
bearded dad to find some way to convey to him her love of singing.
She
sings "Je Vole" into his mouth while he hugs her so that he can feel
something of the rhythm of her voice through the contact between their
bodies.
French filmgoers are perverse. Films that are flagged as
blockbusters often flop; some of the great successes of recent years,
such as Amélie, received little advance hype.
La Famille Bélier,
like many French comic films, lacks subtlety and polish. All the same,
as Shakespeare says – "You've seen how it can rain while the sun
shines?" – laughter and tears are an irresistible double act.