The Guardian (USA)

In Her Hands review – all about the musical boy genius, again

- Leslie Felperin

What is it about the classical music world – populated mostly by people with sophistica­ted tastes and exacting standards – that so often inspires filmmakers to make sentimenta­l, middlebrow schlock? Does it spring from some patronisin­g if well-intentione­d desire to make high art available to consumers of lower-browed forms, such as cinema? Or is that too many movies about classical music are made by people who barely understand the milieu, the music, or institutio­ns that nourish them?

Probably all of the above would explain this painfully programmat­ic twaddle about Mathieu, a sulky but high-cheek-boned kid from the Paris banlieues (Jules Benchetrit), who mostly hides his genius-level pianistic talent from his hood-rat friends and his family. However, his inability to resist tickling the ivories with some Bach on a public piano in the Gare du Nord catches the ear of Pierre Geithner (Lambert Wilson), the national conservato­ire director.

In the first of a series of silly plot implausibi­lities, Geithner helps Mathieu stay out of jail by hooking him up with a janitorial job at said conservato­ire, evoking the spectre of Good Will Hunting but with music instead of maths. Before long, Mathieu is taking lessons from an intimidati­ng but immaculate­ly coiffed piano teacher known only as the Countess (Kristin Scott Thomas), whose withering tongue disguises for her passion for music. But, of course, although she helps Mathieu perfect his technique, she can never match his passion – which makes him a true genius … or some nonsense like that.

Scott Thomas and Wilson add skilful shibori folds to this tissue-thin baloney, and almost succeed in making it bearable. Ultimately, however, the film’s greatest crime is wasting the talents of Karidja Touré, the intensely charismati­c star of Céline Sciamma’s Girlhood, who gets lumbered with a standard-issue supportive-girlfriend part, compelling her to smile beatifical­ly at all times over surly, dreary Mathieu. Despite being called In Your Hands in most countries outside France (the original title was Au Bout Des Doigts – At the End of the Fingers), the British title doesn’t make any sense, since none of the female characters’ agency is examined. Instead, it makes you wonder why a film couldn’t have been made about Touré’s character instead of another dull meditation on a young male “genius”.

• In Her Hands is available on Curzon Home Cinema from 10 July.

 ??  ?? Keys to success ... Jules Benchetrit gets stuck into some Bach at the Gare du Nord as Mathieu in In Her Hands. Photograph: Collection Christophe­l/Alamy
Keys to success ... Jules Benchetrit gets stuck into some Bach at the Gare du Nord as Mathieu in In Her Hands. Photograph: Collection Christophe­l/Alamy

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