In French with English subtitles
Genre: Fantasy/Comedy
Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Cast: Dany Boon, André Dussollier,
Nicolas Marié, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Yolande Moreau,
Julie Ferrier, Omar Sy, Dominique Pinon, Michel Cremandes,
Marie-Julie Baup
RunTime: 1 hr 46 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Sexual References and Some
Violence)
Official Website: http://micmacs.substance001.com/
Opening Day: 12 May 2011
Synopsis: Jean-Pierre Jeunet's gorgeously romantic AMELIE is unquestionably one of the most
beloved and popular films of the last decade. Jeunet's amazing visual vocabulary and
hyperactive imagination provide the foundation for all his cinematic creations, and
this ability to be both playful and serious is used to devastating effect in his
latest piece of movie magic MICMACS.
First it was a mine that exploded in the middle of the Moroccan desert. Years later,
it was a stray bullet that lodged in his brain... Bazil doesn't have much luck with
weapons. The first made him an orphan, the second holds him on the brink of sudden,
instant death.
Released from the hospital after his accident, Bazil is homeless. Luckily, our
inspired and gentle-natured dreamer is quickly taken in by a motley crew of junkyard
dealers living in a veritable Ali Baba's cave. The group's talents and aspirations
are as surprising as they are diverse: Remington, Calculator, Buster, Slammer,
Elastic Girl, Tiny Pete and Mama Chow.
Then one day, walking by two huge buildings, Bazil recognizes the logos of the
weapons manufacturers that caused all of his misfortune. He sets out to take
revenge, with the help of his faithful gang of wacky friends. Underdogs battling
heartless industrial giants, our gang relive the battle of David and Goliath, with
all the imagination and fantasy of Buster Keaton...
Movie Review:
After a brief hiatus, director Jean-Pierre
Jeunet returns with his sixth feature film, "Micmacs"
or "shenanigans" in its rough translation. And shenanigans
is what we get in this film where he creates a world not too
different from his acclaimed "Amelie" and something
resembling the core moralities of "Delicatessen".
A deft balance of spectacle and storytelling, "Micmacs"
works as a feel-good supplement taken with the rest of his
oeuvre. If there is an aversion to Jeunet's strong and at
times overbearing sense of trademark whimsy, then there might
be sequences here at invoke said ire but all things considered,
"Micmacs" comes across a little more reserved and
nails it on its storytelling more often than not as it uses
rightfully uses its terrifically drawn world as a backdrop
for its characters and set-pieces.
When Bazil (Danny Boon), a video-store clerk
with an understandable grudge towards arms dealers and weapons
manufacturers when a terrific opening sequence of events (again,
like something out of "Amelie") enacts the history
of his father's death when stepping on a landmine and when
Bazil himself gets a bullet lodged in his head when a gun
goes off across the street when escaping criminals make their
getaway. This accident leaves Bazil and his doctors with a
quandary -- remove the bullet and give him a life albeit as
a vegetable, or leave the bullet in and have Bazil lead a
full life but one that could end unpredictable at any given
moment due to the injury. Bazil then meets and falls in with
a group of motley misfit geniuses who live in a scrapheap
and share the same disinclination for the weapons manufacturers
that got Bazil in this state and they begin a plan to play
off two of the manufacturers against each other to teach them
a lesson.
The cadre of characters that Bazil meets
are interesting enough that each of them may be able to hold
up an entire film on their own but within the film's well-paced
running time, we get to see them as a crazy circuit of laughter,
romance and wonderment. Each of these characters are represented
by a trait -- a wily ex-convict named Placard (Jean-Pierre
Marielle); a mathematician with an amazing ability of calling
up pertinent numbers in a second (Marie-Julie Baup), Remington
(Omar Sy) a strangely effective quote-machine, Buster (Dominique
Pinon) once upon a time record-holder for being a human cannonball,
Tiny Pete (Michel Cremades) who invents everything out of
nothing and Mama Chow (Yolande Moreau) the matriach of the
group. And what is a Jeunet film without romance? There is
also the cute contortionist (Julie Ferrier), who falls for
Bazil. This group, or family as they would call it as called
the Mic-macs.
With
more than a slight resemblance to "Mystery Men"
in its tone and set-up of underdog characters against a bigger
badder enemy, Jeunet crafts this film with a film-lover's
perspective in mind. From Bazil's own obsession with movies,
starting its overt references with "The Big Sleep",
through "Once Upon a Time in America" and "Metropolis"
to "Taxi Driver", the film then hits thematic and
narrative touchstones like "Yojimbo" when the group
begins to play delicate yet elaborate games against the arms
dealers. It all coheres when it takes on the nature of a heist
movie like "Mission: Impossible". Endlessly inventive,
"Micmacs" is a charmer.
Movie Rating:
  
(A wonderful new entry by Jeunet with fun storytelling
and rich visuals)
Review by Justin Deimen
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