My Life As a Courgette
Dir: Claude Barras
2016
****
Quite how Claude Barras has
successfully created a light-hearted and touching film about a child who
accidently kills his neglectful and alcoholic mother is beyond me. I think that
audiences have become so used to sugar-coated and emotionally manipulative drama
that it is easy to overlook the possibilities of simple story telling and that
a story can contain important and heart-warming sentiment without being overly
sentimental. The story is adapted from Gilles Paris’ 2002 novel Autobiographie
d’une Courgette, a striking title that cleverly lures people in, even though it
has absolutely nothing to do with vegetables. The story was adapted once before
in a live action format for French television, while I haven’t seen it, I have
seen quite a few films that deal with the same subject, so I think it was
clever of Barras to take a different approach and transform the story into
stop-motion animation. While the film takes on what could be seen as adult
subjects, it does concern children and if I had older children I would
certainly let them watch it, I would encourage them even. The story starts with
a young boy called Icare who lives with his mother who has become neglectful
and an alcoholic, after his father abandoned them. She once called him
Courgette out of affection, a name he clings to as he hides in his attic room,
playing with his mother’s empty beer cans while she drinks and shouts at the
television down stairs. After a tower of beer cans he makes comes crashing down
in noisy fashion, his mother storms up the attic ladder in a shouting rage. Out
of fear Icare shuts the door, accidently knocking his mother down the ladder
and to her death. When talking to the policeman that finds him, it becomes
clear that young Icare has little understanding of the situation and just wants
to go back home to his mother, an unhappy life but all that he’s used to. He
develops further when relocated to a children’s home just outside of town.
There we meet other children who have been orphaned due to drink, drugs and
general abandonment or who have been taken from home due to abuse or because
their parents have been deported. The abuse and the effect it has had on each
character is treated with great care and is at the heart of what makes the film
so profound. There is wonderful simplicity to the film that really helps in
getting the subject across, with attention to detail prevailing over stereotype
or cliché. It is profound to see such dark issues addressed with such innocence
and clarity, making the film appealing to both older and younger viewers. It
doesn’t do anything it doesn’t have to and doesn’t stick to any formula for the
sake of it. Stop-motion can take a ridiculously long time. Which is probably
the reason the film is only an hour long but I’m glad that they didn’t work
that little bit longer to conform and essentially bulk the film with
unnecessary filler. The animation is terrific, the perfect balance between
detailed and simplistic, with slight facial expressions rightfully deemed as
most important, over lavish background and scenery. It’s a wonderful look at
how people, no matter what age they are, cope with loneliness and abandonment
and also how they can find unity and belonging from them. A bold but subtle
venture that will hopefully be of some influence on kids films for now on.
No comments:
Post a Comment