Fat Girl Movie Review
Fat Girl Review

"Fat Girl" Overview

Rating: NR
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Catherine BreillatProducer : Jean-François Lepetit
Screenwiter : Catherine Breillat
Starring : Anaïs Reboux,Roxane Mesquida,Libero De Rienzo,Arsinée Khanjian,Romain Goupil
Fit for a ghoul’s night out, Fat Girl stands cast iron firm with the
simplistic, fatuous, built-in excuse that its woman director is baring the
harsh sexual realities of adolescent girls. Being a boy, I might not
understand female behavior and am unequipped to analyze this particular
pseudo-feminist coming-of-age story. Fair enough. I’ll pretend to ignore the
mannered posturing and Health Class 101 “this is a no-no” dialogue when Older
Teenage Boy coaxes Younger Teenage Girl to let him have anal sex with her,
speaking variations on “It won’t hurt!” for a scene that seems to last at least
ten minutes. This is done almost entirely in an unbroken master shot that
suggests unimaginative camerawork more than unblinking voyeurism. They dare
you to look away, without possessing the courage of allowing the children to
actually sound like children (they’re mouthpieces for writer-director Catherine
Breillat’s one-note clinical politics).
Rather than show an even-handed evaluation of the rigors of hormonal change,
Breillat (previously responsible for the unwatchable Romance) wants to indulge
in her hour of hate. Life is pain, highness. Get used to it. She’d find keen
bedfellows in Neil LaBute and Todd Solondz, other sultans of misanthropy who
lack the balls to be earnest or honest. For children, dealing with trauma and
pain is complicated. To bury that in sarcasm and academic theory feels cheap.
These would-be auteurs (more like hauteurs) haven’t earned the right to display
suffering because they don’t layer it in emotional truth (as Mike Leigh does
throughout Naked and David Lynch in several key scenes of Blue Velvet). Of
course, there I go again comparing her to all these (better) male directors. I
don’t care. Gender be damned, she’s borderline inept.
Braced for a knee-jerk reaction from the art house crowd (mortified shock or
compulsory applause will suffice), writer-director Catherine Breillat may well
accomplish her mission to get a rise out of people. Don’t be fooled. This
grotesque oversimplification of awkward forays into passion may be quickly
forgotten, remembered only as cold, boring, philosophically arid, and
incompetently photographed. The hyperviolent climactic sequence proves so
extraordinarily misguided that I honestly wondered whether Breillat had thrown
in an impromptu dream sequence.
Twelve years old, a bundle of dough with a sour pout, the superb Anaïs Reboux
plays the titular fat girl with a thousand yard stare and a frumpy
insouciance. (Her character is also named Anaïs.) Sitting at the table
morosely slurping down a banana split, her presence is grounded and
heartbreaking. It’s a pity Breillat never finds anything for her to do other
than get defensive against her evil storybook sister, 15-year old Elena (Roxane
Mesquida), for bringing a transitory boyfriend home to their shared room. In
this summer cottage, Anaïs has no escape from her position as stoic bedside
observer to Elena’s depressing confusion of cheap sex with romance. The boy in
question, a smug Italian college kid named Fernando (Libero De Rienzo) is a
real piece of work, claiming that the experience is a declaration of love while
begging for a blowjob.
Anaïs doesn’t receive any warmth from her largely absent parents, who join
Elena in making fun of her hefty girth. She finds pleasure in wandering the
beach alone, singing songs to herself, and swimming in the pool kissing the
metal railing and pretending that it’s her paramour. Reboux commands the
screen, but there’s only so much a child actress can do recounting pretentious
monologues to herself. If one is inspired to rescue this young performer and
place her in a better movie, at least she fares better than the other young
talent asked to perform in intense love scenes that might feel justified if
they weren’t so dramatically misguided.
This 83-minute vignette is something of a horror show, but Breillat saves her
nastiest poison for the very end. On the long ride home punctuated by an
uncomfortable silence between family members, gigantic trucks swerve by as the
hour grows late. Will mommy fall asleep at the wheel? Perhaps. Or maybe
there’s something deadlier around the corner, lying in wait to pounce upon the
unsuspecting Fat Girl. What’s more, she might even like it. With the intent
of being unfair and unpredictable, placing her heroine in the most diabolical
of corners in order to face up to impending adulthood, Breillat’s extreme
flourish of sadistic tawdriness reveals her as a master purveyor of contempt.
Fat Girl is a bitter pill indeed.
Editor's Note: Jeremiah thinks I'm insane for putting Fat Girl on my top 10 of
2001, but I think it's Breillat's best work that perfectly captures the horrors
of adolescence, and it's a pinnacle she's yet to reach since. Criterion agrees,
putting the film out on DVD with the full treatment: Two interviews with
Breillat (with a peek at an alternate ending), behind-the-scenes footage, and a
DTS soundtrack. I recommend it, but Kipp makes some strong points. Be warned,
either way. -CN
Aka À ma soeur!
Beached.
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Review by Jeremiah Kipp
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