Pretty
on the Outside Luc
Besson's latest is too sweet for its own good BY
MOLLY TEMPLETON
ANGEL-A:
Written and directed by Luc Besson. Cinematography, Thierry Arbogast.
Music, Anja Garbarek. Production design, Jacques Bufnoir. Starring
Jamel Debbouze and Rie Rasmussen. Sony Pictures Classics, 2006.
91 minutes. R.
Arguably, French writer-director-producer Luc Besson
made his biggest splash in American theaters with 1997's The
Fifth Element, a sci-fi trip full of derivative moments and
blinding sets — and creative, playful spirit and striking
images. Before Element, Besson was best known for The
Professional, which cast a very young, clearly talented Natalie
Portman as a girl in the care and training of a hitman, and La
Femme Nikita, about a convicted felon reinvented as a super-spy.
Between Element and Angel-A (which
was released in 2005 in France), Besson directed one film, the flimsy
The Messenger. (He spent his time producing handfuls of films,
from Tommy Lee Jones' The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada
to the the underappreciated District B13, which he also co-wrote.)
You can trace a line connecting these three films with no effort
whatsoever: They all involve preternaturally gifted — and
astonishingly leggy — women as powerful saviors. Element's
unforgettable, orange-haired Leeloo (Milla Jovovich) was an alien
being helping Bruce Willis' cabdriver save the universe from evil;
The Messenger's main character, Joan of Arc (Jovovich again),
doesn't need any introduction; Angel-A's Angela (Rie Rasmussen)
abilities are right there in the film's title. Makeup smeared, platinum
hair mussed, she appears on the Paris bridge from which André
(Jamel Debbouze, of Amelie) is preparing to leap. André
is in massive debt, broke, lacking identification and full of self-deception.
His introduction to the viewer is nearly all lies, at the end of
which he admits he lies to himself incessantly. But Debbouze's childlike,
open face makes us want to think André is capable of more than
simply trying to weasel his way out of paying up. André, though,
is running out of options.
Enter Angela, who throws herself into the river
and, when André saves her, attaches herself to him. Enthusiastic,
cheery, innocent and sensual, Angela seems to embody too many things
at once; it's almost impossible to keep an eye on her ever-moving
limbs. She towers over André, who seems constantly to squint
as if he's looking straight into the sun when he looks up at her.
The two of them traipse through a stunning Paris of empty streets
(the black-and-white film was shot in July and August, when many
Parisians were on vacation) and endless bridges. Angela has decided
to help André get himself together again — it's repayment
for his pulling her from the river. But her techniques are incomprehensible,
and André begins to ask questions, confused about Angela's
motives, talents and actions.
Angela's provenance is no surprise, and neither
is her eventual breakdown or the film's fairy-tale feel, especially
as it draws to a close. This is a wee urban fable of a different
kind, one involving not the fey but the sublime — albeit a
sublime with a sense of humor. But this sense is inconsistent, and
one of Angel-A's main failures is that it simply takes itself
too seriously. It's wish fulfillment of a high order: A scruffy,
scheming, duplicitous man is saved from himself by the love of a
good (gorgeous, heaven-sent) woman. Without an awareness of the
sentimentality inherent in this story and a strong sense of humor
to temper that sentimentality, Angel-A becomes treacly and
uncomfortably sweet. Though it's stacked with dazzling imagery and
beautiful shots, perfect costumes and a dancing interplay of light
on dark, there's simply nothing satisfying in this cotton-candy
tale but its gorgeously filmed surfaces.