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Director : Christian Carion
Producer : Christophe Rossignon
Screenwriter : Christian Carion
Starring : Gary Lewis, Daniel Brühl, Diane Kruger, Robin Laing, Guillame Canet, Steven Robertson
Whoever was in charge of distribution for Christian Carion’s Joyeux Noël should
be shamed out of the business. The reason is simple: for a film almost strictly
about the Christmas spirit and human connection, it doesn’t fair well that the
audience has gotten over that feeling a solid 2 months ago. Where a film like
The Family Stone could get away with being released at another time, part of
Joyeux Noël’s pull is that it taps into that united feeling we get at Christmas
and New Year's. However, this is not to say that Carion doesn’t know how to
make a good movie.
It’s the First World War, and the British, French, and Germans are all held up
at a front in France, where the Brits and the French are determined to send the
Germans home. Earlier, three brothers from Scotland are told that they will be
going to Glasgow for military training. Palmer, the oldest and an Anglican
priest (Gary Lewis), is apprehensive while his younger brothers, Jonathan and
William (Steven Robertson and Robin Laing, respectively) can’t wait to go out
and defend their country. The French commander, Lieutenant Audebert (a great
Guillame Canet), tries to keep his soldiers morale up after a small massacre in
the trenches from a German gunner. Meanwhile, the German leader, Horstmayer
(Daniel Brühl), attempts to find a way to get out of the fight with his honor
intact.
Then, suddenly, a German soldier named Nikolaus (he is actually a famed opera
singer back home) sings Silent Night and gets backing from Scottish soldiers’
bagpipes. A truce is called in the name of the holidays and all the soldiers
drink, eat and swap stories about women back home, including Nikolaus’ singing
partner (Diane Kruger). For one night, they just decide to be humans, no matter
what the consequences.
Like its fellow foreign language Oscar nominee Tsotsi, Joyeux Noël is
strikingly familiar in its plot structure. However, where Tsotsi dealt with the
gritty, crime-soaked ghettos with a harsh style and expert direction, Joyeux
Noël has a timid nature to it. There’s no doubt that the film is entertaining,
but dealing with war and unity needs to have some more intricacy to it. There
are some terrible moments of cliché (the dead soldier’s open eyes staring right
at Audebert, the brotherly dynamics between Palmer and his siblings) that
hinder it from having any witty revelations about war. And there's no real
moment of brutality to show the reaction of the governments of each country,
not wanting peace on the fly, or even at all, maybe.
The actors buck up the moments of trite material. The great character actor
Gary Lewis (he was the father in Billy Elliot and Thomas in Peter Mullan’s
criminally underrated Orphans) uses a calm, even performance to see the
religious and logical reactions to war. Daniel Brühl excels as Horstmayer,
balancing his strict discipline and his melancholic tone with a master’s
precision. The rest of the cast is excellent, with the notable exception of
Kruger, who can’t make us believe her singing (it was actually done by famed
French soprano Natalie Dessay) nor does she really get to the heart of woman
trying to get to her soldier boyfriend (she’s no Audrey Tautou). As
entertainment goes, the film knows its strides and how to make an audience
happy. But for an R-rated war film, this puppy has no claws.
Joyeux to the world.
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" OK "
Rating: R, 2005