Whanganui Midweek

Comedic clash in 50s French movie offering

- — Time Out

Whanganui Film Society’s next screening is Jacques Tati’s Mon

Oncle from 1958, a gently comedic clash of the old and new in 1950s France.

REVIEWS

“Young Gerard Arpel feels alienated and constricte­d in his parents’ house, in which ingenious modern gadgets replace human effort and precision scheduling passes for interactio­n. Therefore he loves to spend time with his Uncle Hulot (Tati), whose home resembles a nest at the top of a ramshackle old house in a lively, impoverish­ed quarter of the city. Much of the humour of this delicately-timed comedy comes from the relationsh­ip of these two innocents to the house itself, which functions like a frightenin­gly beautiful and entirely superfluou­s machine. A highlight of the film is the garden party thrown by the Arpels in a last-ditch attempt to distract Uncle with a lady friend and thereby gain back their son’s attention. Here minimal dialogue combines with maximum sound effects, brilliant colour photograph­y and choreograp­hed movements to create a futuristic 50s fantasy.” — Pacific Film Archive

“Insane gadgets slam and roar, high heels click like metronomes, and even a depressed daschund in a tartan overcoat obligingly submits to Tati’s meticulous direction.

“Unforgetta­bly funny, wonderfull­y observed, and always technicall­y brilliant.”

WHANGANUI FILM SOCIETY

MON ONCLE, Monday, May 28, 7pm, Davis Theatre, Whanganui Regional Museum

Jacques Tati • France/Italy • 1958

 ?? PICTURE / SUPPLIED ?? A still from Mon Oncle.
PICTURE / SUPPLIED A still from Mon Oncle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand