Serge Gainsbourg, vie héroïque (2010)
Directed by Joann Sfar

Biography / Drama / Music
aka: Gainsbourg

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Serge Gainsbourg, vie heroique (2010)
Serge Gainsbourg, vie héroïque isn't so much your traditional biopic as an unbridled celebration of a great artist, as vibrant and mercurial as the man it portrays.  This extravagant debut feature from Joann Sfar, best known as one of France's leading comic book artists, has little interest in telling Gainsbourg's story as it was but instead presents it as it seemed, a flurry of activity defined by notoriety, fast living and some legendary art.   Rather than dispel the myth, the film perpetuates and amplifies it, rendering the personality of Gainsbourg even more complex and mystifying.  The film's original French title is presumably intended to be ironic, since Gainsbourg's heroism extends no further than learning to live with a face that looks as if it collided with a bus.

Serge Gainsbourg was himself a film director of some ability, albeit one with a penchant for the controversial (as his 1976 erotic drama Je t'aime moi non plus demonstrates).   As uninhibited as he was in his various artistic endeavours, it is doubtful that even Gainsbourg could have made a film that is as wild and rough-edged as this quasi-biography.  Yet, whilst the film does embrace arty excess a little too often, it does evoke the character of Gainsbourg and his art, and brilliantly so.  Structurally the film is a mess, cutting and pasting episodes from its subject's life much as child might assemble a collage from a collection of glossy magazines.  But, in spite of this, it does hold our attention and manages to portray Gainsbourg as a three-dimensional individual, showing us both the good and bad sides of his character.  We see the familiar enfant terrible, the hedonist who could not help attracting notoriety, but we also see the other Gainsbourg, the man who was haunted by his own demons and who, at times, genuinely did suffer for his art.

Serge Gainsbourg was such a unique personality that you might think it inconceivable that any actor could play him convincingly on the screen.  Yet Eric Elmosnino does just this, not merely resembling the legendary singer and closely imitating his mannerisms, but also broadcasting something of his charisma and character.  Elmosnino's portrayal captures the essence of Gainsbourg, the man and his art, and brings solidity to a film that could so easily have ended up as spectacle of vacuous artistic posturing. 

The film's initial release in France in January 2010 was overshadowed by the death of Elmosnino's co-star, Lucy Gordon, who played Gainsbourg's long-term partner Jane Birkin.  The 28-year-old English actress committed suicide just a few weeks after completing work on this film.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.

Film Synopsis

In the 1940s, with Paris under Nazi occupation, a young boy named Lucien Ginsburg grows up and finds he shares his father's artistic leanings.  The young Lucien shows a particular aptitude for the piano and has all the makings of a classical pianist.  Life in the capital soon becomes unbearable for Lucien and his family, and they are forced to move to a place where they are less likely to be harassed by the Germans and French police.  Then comes the Liberation and the Ginsburgs can return safely to their home in Paris to resume their old life.

Despite his early promise, Lucien proves to be a poor student and he fails his end of school exams.  He even gives up his artistic career, pulling out of a course to study art.  By the time he is thirty, he is still unknown and scrapes a living as best he can, by giving music lessons and working as a school supervisor.  It is only when he hears the writer Boris Vian reading his provocative work that Lucien discovers his true vocation in life.  The poet within him suddenly awakened, he embarks on a new career as a singer and musician.  Within a few years he will become one of the biggest cultural icons of his age.  We now know him as Serge Gainsbourg...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Joann Sfar
  • Script: Joann Sfar (novel)
  • Cinematographer: Guillaume Schiffman
  • Music: Olivier Daviaud
  • Cast: Eric Elmosnino (Serge Gainsbourg), Lucy Gordon (Jane Birkin), Laetitia Casta (Brigitte Bardot), Doug Jones (La Gueule), Anna Mouglalis (Juliette Gréco), Mylène Jampanoï (Bambou), Sara Forestier (France Gall), Kacey Mottet Klein (Lucien Ginsburg), Razvan Vasilescu (Joseph Ginsburg (le père)), Dinara Drukarova (Olga Ginsburg (la mère)), Philippe Katerine (Boris Vian), Deborah Grall (Elisabeth Levizky), Yolande Moreau (Fréhel), Ophélia Kolb (Le Modèle)
  • Country: France
  • Language: French / English / Russian
  • Support: Black and White / Color
  • Runtime: 130 min
  • Aka: Gainsbourg ; Gainsbourg (Vie héroïque) ; Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life

The very best of German cinema
sb-img-25
German cinema was at its most inspired in the 1920s, strongly influenced by the expressionist movement, but it enjoyed a renaissance in the 1970s.
The greatest French Films of all time
sb-img-4
With so many great films to choose from, it's nigh on impossible to compile a short-list of the best 15 French films of all time - but here's our feeble attempt to do just that.
Kafka's tortuous trial of love
sb-img-0
Franz Kafka's letters to his fiancée Felice Bauer not only reveal a soul in torment; they also give us a harrowing self-portrait of a man appalled by his own existence.
Continental Films, quality cinema under the Nazi Occupation
sb-img-5
At the time of the Nazi Occupation of France during WWII, the German-run company Continental produced some of the finest films made in France in the 1940s.
The best French Films of the 1920s
sb-img-3
In the 1920s French cinema was at its most varied and stylish - witness the achievements of Abel Gance, Marcel L'Herbier, Jean Epstein and Jacques Feyder.
 

Other things to look at


Copyright © frenchfilms.org 1998-2024
All rights reserved



All content on this page is protected by copyright