
This French film from earlier in the year was one that got some jaw-dropping critical notice & one that I'd had my eye on renting for a while. A remake of a great American underground 70s film called
"Fingers" (
which starred a young, intense and wild-eyed Harvey Keitel),
"THE BEAT THAT MY HEART SKIPPED" came off as decent enough but a little underwhelming. I think it might have something to do with smirking star
Romain Duris, who is supposed to be this would-be thug who roughs up real-estate squatters in Paris, but comes off instead like an effete and arty nightlife hound. He's torn between two legacies - that of his concert-pianist mother, who provided him him some (not all) of her musical gift, and that of his hoodlum, lecherous Dad. Though there's some good tension between the two DNA-provided worlds, I don't think Duris pulls off the unbalance quite the way Keitel did. His choice to follow one instead of the other has some pretty tragic consequences, which frankly I didn't see coming at all.
I like that the story's core is the same as in "Fingers", but so much of it has changed, including the addition of a "two years later" postscript.
Emmanuelle Devos, who was so great in
"Read My Lips", was barely present in this one, which is too bad because when I read about this film I got the sense that she was one of the two stars. That must've been some other movie. I guess I'd recommend "The Beat That my Heart Skipped" as a rental only, and then one only if you've seen everything else that's halfway decent. Then you might wanna consider watching this, OK?
That must've been some other movie.
ReplyDeleteProbably Arnaud Desplechin's KINGS AND QUEENS from 2004 wich I prefered over THE BEAT...
(http://www.filmfestivalrotterdam.com/eng/searchresults/film.aspx?id=29034&year=2005)