Paulette (2013): Written by
Laurie Aubanel, Jerome Enrico, Bianca Olsen, and Cyril Rambour. Directed by Jerome Enrico. Starring:
Bernadette Lafont, Carmen Maura, Dominique Lavanant, Andre Penvern, and Ismael
Drame. Running Time: 87 Minutes.
Rating: 3/4 Stars
Do you recall those ads about not
judging by appearance? Where they show
you the photo of a seemingly sweet old grandma before telling you that Granny
was arrested for selling drugs?
Apparently someone saw one of those and thought to themselves, “Now THAT
is the stuff of screwball comedy legend!”
While, sad to say, this movie never approaches the realm of legend, Paulette does have enough wit and clever
visual gagery to earn its screwball cred, despite a story that ends up being a
touch too airy for its own good.
Paulette is a hilariously racist old
widower, feeling increasingly angry and bitter at the modern, multi-ethnic
France that surrounds her. Her husband apparently
died from alcoholism. Her restaurant has
been taken over by a Japanese couple.
Her daughter had the gall to marry an African and have a child with him,
whom she “zanily” refers to as her “little nigger.” On top of all that, she is now flat out of
cash, and has to find food and furniture by rummaging through the garbage. She senses a chance to change her luck,
however, when her son-in-law, a police detective, mentions to her the insane
profits the drug-dealers he tracks down make.
Smelling green (both literally and figuratively), she tracks down a
local dealer and slowly worms her way into his trust by selling more dope
faster than anyone else under him. Eventually,
she stumbles onto the idea of using her skills from her restaurant days to make
pastries laced with the drugs. The
explosion of success this brings catches the attention of both the “big boss”
(read Russian) and her son-in-law detective, setting the stage for some
hy-LAIR-eyous third-act hijinks.
My inane sarcasm aside, this movie works very well.
Lafont does an excellent job of creating a character that you just love
hating, but can still understand. I
mean, racism is racism no matter what, but when it’s been a part of someone’s
life for so long, it makes sense that it would only slowly dissipate, even in
the face of overwhelming evidence that their previous assumptions are just
plain wrong- her grandchild has to literally save her life before she starts
seeing him as something other than black.
The rest of the cast is serviceable, but the only other person who
manages to make an impression is Paulette’s neighbor across the hall, a widower
who is obscenely, almost pathetically, in love with her- in a fantastically
cruel twist of fate, for their first date he takes her to the (Japanese) restaurant
that ran hers out of business. The rest-
the family, her retired friends, the dealers- fill out the screen well enough
without giving offense, but this movie could have benefited greatly from a few
more memorable side characters.
From a visual standpoint the only thing
of note that makes Paulette stand out
is its clever use of doorway peepholes.
The inherent distortion that they give to the image makes for some
excellent gags, including one where the son-in-law trips over the neighbor that
we can see, but he can’t. I wish there
was more I could offer than that, but from a technical standpoint the movie stays
pretty basic. Again, like with the cast,
this does not lessen it, but some more creativity with the
camerawork/lighting/sets/etc. could have also elevated the movie a bit more
above its plot.
I won’t delve into specific spoilers,
but I really shouldn’t have to- there are no major twists or turns that take
the movie out of the realm of the comedy.
Which, in a way, works against it, because a movie about old ladies
getting into drug rings should not be nearly as rosy as this movie is. The humor and jokes never stop working, but
its refusal to make more than token gestures of seriousness give the film an
air of dispassionate detachment. Lafont’s
Paulette is witty enough to keep you laughing, but, as I said before, this is
the sort of character who is interesting only insofar that it’s a lot of fun
hating her. Her bitterness, her racism,
and the fact that she is doing all sorts of illegal and dangerous things never
make her someone most people could sympathize with. As a result, not only does the movie feel
detached, but we, the audience, become detached as well, and thus are less
likely to care about what happens.
This is not helped by the fact that
there are never any real consequences for her actions. There are a lot of moments where the movie
could veer into dark or grim territory, forcing Paulette to really reexamine her
priorities in life. If her “conversions”
were accompanied or paralleled by the sort of real tragedy that could so easily
result from being a drug dealer- the sort of tragedy that actually DOES happen
to plenty of real people- then Paulette
would be a much more memorable experience.
As it is, it’s a fun way to kill an hour and a half, one that won’t tax
your brain too hard. It may be fluff,
but when it’s funny, it’s really funny.