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A Spot of Bother (2010 film)

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Wikipedia article




'A Spot of Bother' ('A small area of turbulence'), is a French comedy drama film directed by Alfred Lot and starring Michel Blanc, released in 2010, and based on the 2006 novel by the English writer Mark Haddon 'A Spot of Bother'. It concerns the family crisis of a hypochondriac middle-aged man, his wife and grown-up children.

Synopsis



Jean-Paul Muret, who has recently taken retirement, is also a hypochondriac. He and his wife, Anne, live in a fine house outside Paris where he busies himself building a shed in the large grounds. However, Anne is having an affair with one of his former colleagues, David. Jean-Paul and Anne's children are Cathie, who is divorced with a five-year-old son and lives with Philippe who runs a small business of bouncers but has been named "Bac moins six" ("IQ minus 10") by Mathieu, the gay son who is in a relationship with Olivier. When Jean-Paul witnesses his wife's infidelity the family equilibrium implodes into disputes, insults and settling of accounts.

One day, in a changing-room while buying a new suit, Jean-Paul finds a spot on his hip, and although reassured by his doctor that it is just discoid eczema, he panics and believes he has skin cancer. At the same time he learns that Cathie and Philippe plan to marry and is unable to mask his disapproval. Mathieu is reluctant to bring his partner Olivier to the wedding, which leads the latter to break up. Philippe begins to doubt his worth, the marriage, and whether Cathie loves him.

Claiming to need a change of air, Jean-Paul decides to visit his brother (whom he can't stand) but abandons his trip and returns home, and, without being noticed, catches Anne and David having sex in the marital bed, and from then on behaves more and more strangely. Jean-Paul goes to a psychiatrist, but afterwards decides to remove the 'cancer' himself with scissors, ending up in hospital. Family arguments ensue. Eventually Cathie and Philippe reconcile and the marriage plans go ahead, but on the day Jean-Paul takes the wrong doses of his medicines, and tries to avoid the ceremony. Olivier turns up during the reception, but Jean-Paul then makes a depressing speech, after which he attacks David, whom he had long before invited to the reception. Calm is eventually restored and with the three couples seemingly reunited, Jean-Paul and Anne look for some way forward.

Cast



* Michel Blanc : Jean-Paul Muret

* Miou-Miou : Anne Muret

* Mlanie Doutey : Cathie Muret

* Gilles Lellouche : Philippe Faure

* Cyril Descours : Mathieu Muret

* Wladimir Yordanoff : David

* Yannick Renier : Olivier

* ric Caravaca : Fabien, the first husband of Cathie

* Jolhan Martin : Hugo, Cathie and Fabien's son

* Nathalie Richard : Psychiatrist

* Marie-Christine Orry : Aunt Lucie

* Dominique Parent : Uncle Alain

* Jean-Yves Chatelais : Dr Bargouthian

Production



Background

Haddon's second novel 'A Spot of Bother' was published in 2006 and shortlisted for the 2006 Costa Novel Award.[https://literature.britishcouncil.org/writer/mark-haddon British Council: Literature Mark Haddon, biography] accessed 12 March 2021. It deals with events in the life of a 57-year-old early retired man who finds a lesion on his hip, and despite reassurance from his doctor, transforms the spot into a malignant skin cancer, and what happens as he tries remain sane; "the novel moves in and out of the lives and minds of Georges wife, son, and daughter". The plot describes the "messy ordinariness of our lives, lives that revolve not around epic quests of historical significance, but marriages and divorces, love and sex, births and deaths".[https://literature.britishcouncil.org/writer/mark-haddon British Council: Literature Mark Haddon, Critical perspective] accessed 12 March 2021. The book was translated into French in 2007 by Odile Demange as 'Une situation lgrement dlicate' ('A slightly delicate position').[https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb41000136w BnF Catalogue general Notice bibliographique 'Une situation lgrement dlicate'] accessed 12 March 2021.

Yves Marmion, a producer at UGC, tried to get the actor Michel Blanc back into directing by sending him Haddon's book, which Blanc liked, especially its mix of genres, situations "that start gradually degenerating as the characters find themselves sucked into bottomless pits of trouble". However, as there were similarities to the previous film he had directed, 'Summer Things' ('Embrassez qui vous voudrez') he declined to direct the new film, while nonetheless preparing a film scenario from it. He wrote five different versions, and Alfred Lot revised the final draft to create the shooting script.Dossier de presse (press file) for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 2009 UGC YM TF1 Films Production. Section : 'Interview with Michel Blanc', p8-11. When Blanc turned down the direction, Marmion approached Lot, who agreed to direct, and reduced Blanc's two hour and forty minute adaptation, concentrating more on the central character. He and Blanc also decided that there would not be any "easy laughs, that we wouldnt force the structure. The situations and dialogue were either funny in themselves, or not!".Dossier de presse (press file) for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 2009 UGC YM TF1 Films Production. Section : 'Interview with Alfred Lot', p4-7.

The book's plot outline and character relations are retained in the film, but the action is moved from Peterborough and London in England to Paris and the surrounding le-de-France region. George and Jean Hall become Jean-Paul and Anne Muret, Katie and Ray become Cathie and Philippe, and Jamie and Tony become Mathieu and Olivier. Blanc saw in the plot elements of an "English caste system" but translated this for France, into a wish by Jean-Paul and Anne for their daughter to marry well. The working-class Ray in Haddon becomes Philippe, a security guard, involved in a "world that might seem foreign to these people". Philippe "hides behind preformulated phrases" but proves he is "more worthy than he appears to be" in his two scenes with Mathieu.Dossier de presse (press file) for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 2009 UGC YM TF1 Films Production. Section : 'Interview with Gilles Lellouche', p17-19.

The acid and cynical script of the comedy complement the distracted characters.[https://www.lefigaro.fr/cinema/2010/01/13/03002-20100113ARTFIG00018-une-petite-zone-de-turbulences-.php Le Figaro review of 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 13 January 2010.] accessed 15 March 2021. Several of the principal actors emphasize the theme of commitment in the film, and the "funny ways of showing how confused human beings are when faced with commitment".Dossier de presse (press file) for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 2009 UGC YM TF1 Films Production. Section : 'Interview with Miou-Miou', p12-13. Doutey commented that all the main characters are scared by commitment, except for Philippe.Dossier de presse (press file) for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 2009 UGC YM TF1 Films Production. Section : 'Interview with Mlanie Doutey', p14-16.

Just as Mathieu compartmentalizes his life, Miou-Miou observed that the family name 'Muret' ('little wall' in French'Larousse de la langue franaise lexis', Paris, 1979, p1209) could refer to "the wall Jean-Paul builds or to the familys character as a whole", and their problem in responding to love, and making a commitment. Descours noted that also the film "speaks about the generation gap... Jean-Paul and Anne have stagnated in their beautiful house. The kids are trying to find love and their parents are trying to get it back".Dossier de presse (press file) for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'. 2009 UGC YM TF1 Films Production. Section : 'Interview with Cyril Descours', p20-21. Much of the comedy comes from the inability of each of the family to communicate with one another, leading to the 'turbulences'.[https://cineuropa.org/en/newsdetail/93774/ Fabien Lemercier. Michel Blanc stars in Une petite zone de turbulences. Cineuropa, 17 March 2009], accessed 16 March 2021.

Filming

'A Spot of Bother' had a budget of 9.88 million, including pre-sales from Canal + and Cin Cinma, 2m from TF1 Films Production and 488,000 from the le-de-France region. The shoot took nine weeks, from 4 March to mid May 2009. Lot chose CinemaScope as the principal film medium as he was aiming for a "chic and elegant" feel, in keeping with the dysfunctional upper-middle-class family; although he had planned to use a hand-held camera more, he decided on lots of dolly shots, which he felt fitted the spirit of the film. The house of Anne and Jean-Paul used for the film was located twenty minutes south of Paris, which had an ideal layout, with a large sloping garden and a pond next to which Jean-Paul might build his shed, as well as a lot of possibilities for the interior scenes. Other locations were in Paris, Essonne (Verrires-le-Buisson, Corbreuse), Hauts-de-Seine (Antony), Seine-et-Marne (Villeneuve-le-Comte), Val-de-Marne (Vincennes), Yvelines (Versailles-Chantiers station, Sainte-Mesme).

Release



The film was released in France and Belgium on 13 January 2010.[https://cineuropa.org/fr/film/128356/#cm Cineuropa page for 'Une petite zone de turbulences'] accessed 15 March 2021. A DVD of the film was published in 2010 by UGC, including a 'Making of...' documentary (entitled 'Vous entrez dans une zone de turbulences'), and interviews with both Blanc and Lot (entitled 'Regards Croiss'). A DVD issued in Canada appears to use an English variant title '3/4 life crisis'.[https://www.worldcat.org/title/petite-zone-de-turbulences-34-life-crisis/oclc/786432750&referer=brief_results Worldcat entry for Une petite zone de turbulences = 3/4 life crisis] accessed 16 March 2021.

References




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