Saturday, 24 September 2011

Film Review #7- Amélie

An old film, for a change. I've already seen this one, I guess most people will have. If you haven't, watch it. It is sensational. It's funny, clever, well-made and just the cutest and most uplifting film ever!

"Amélie", directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, is a comedy film, I suppose. It begins with a narrator who announces the small events that happened at the exact time that Amélie was conceived. It's a strange opening, but it's nice, and I like the narrator as well because it makes the film even more unique

Essentially, the film is about Amélie falling in love with Nino, a collector of discarded photo booth photos. It doesn't happen conventionally, in fact he doesn't know who she is until the end.

However, it's also about Amélie anonymously helping people- she sets up two people at the café where she works, fashions a fake letter in order to convince her landlady that her late husband really did love her (a few similarities to Beautiful Lies, perhaps?), and also teachers a mean shopkeeper a lesson.

There's also a mystery in the film, just to add another genre to it. In Nino's album of discarded photos, the same man appears twelve times. Amélie believes he's a ghost- a man scared of being forgotten (which, it turns out, is not the case). When we do find out the identity of the mysterious man, it's a bit of an anticlimax, I think. In some ways, though, it kind of makes the film better, and more like real life.

The way this is filmed is just amazing. It has an almost nostalgic feel to it, and it's so bright, you could almost imagine it as a children's film. The way that film and photos are used in the movie are also very clever; in one instance, Amélie imagines watching a documentary about her own death on TV, explaining how she died of exhaustion, trying to help as many people as she could. At another point, Nino is in bed, when one of his photos talks to him, and tells him about Amélie.

Luncheon of the Boating Party- Renoir
The characters in the film are all really unique, like everything else in this film. Every major character is introduced by the narrator: "This is... He/she likes... He/she doesn't like...". For example, Amélie's father dislikes peeing next to someone else and clingy wet swimming trunks, and likes emptying his tool box, cleaning it out, and putting everything back. There's also "The Glass Man" who was born with bones as brittle as glass, and who spends his life in his flat replicating Renoir's "Luncheon of the Boating Party". However, my favourite character has to be Amélie. My parents say I'm a bit like her, so maybe that's why.
Overall, I think Amélie is truly inspiring. It's one of those rare films you get every now and again which are so beautiful and uplifting, and put your faith back in life when you think you no longer have any.



So, it's my first (for a film, anyway)
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (and it more than deserves it)

Caitlin

1 comment:

  1. Hi Catlin,
    Amélie is a great film, it brings a smile to my face every time I watch it. I have been learning french for a while, and I like to watch french films to try and get used to picking out words from normal speech. I am enjoying reading your blog.
    mine is straypoetry.com I have a few reviews of movies and some music also (some of it french)

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