Register  |   Log In  |  
Sign up to our weekly newsletter    
Search   
Empire Magazine and iPad
Follow Me on Pinterest
Empire
Trending On Empire
Two free posters with Empire magazine
Subscribe: Get Dead Island: Riptide
Empire's Soundtrack Celebration
90 Years Of Warner Bros.
Your chance to win a Blu-ray every day!
Cannes Film Festival 2013
News, photos and more from the Croisette
Reviews
STAR RATINGS EXPLAINED
Unmissable 5 Stars
Excellent 4 Stars
Good 3 Stars
Poor 2 Stars
Tragic 1 Star

FILM DETAILS
Certificate
15
Cast
Dany Boon
Andre Dussollier
Nicolas Marie
Jean-Pierre Marielle.
Directors
Jean-Pierre Jeunet.
Screenwriters
Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Guillaume Laurant.
Running Time
104 minutes

LATEST FILM REVIEWS
A Haunted House
1 Star Empire Rating
Iceman, The
3 Star Empire Rating
Behind The Candelabra
4 Star Empire Rating
Before Midnight
4 Star Empire Rating
Everybody Has A Plan
3 Star Empire Rating



5 STAR REVIEWS
My Neighbour Totoro
5 Star Empire Rating
Gatekeepers , The
5 Star Empire Rating
Stoker
5 Star Empire Rating
In The House
5 Star Empire Rating
Lincoln
5 Star Empire Rating

Micmacs
Paddywack, give Jeunet a Boon


Plot
While witnessing a gun battle, videostore clerk Bazil (Boon) is hit in the head by a stray bullet. He survives, but is left homeless and jobless. After he’s taken in by a group of scrapyard-dwelling misfits, Bazil sets out to wreak his own inimitable revenge on the arms manufacturers who both made the bullet that hit him, and the landmine that killed his father some years previously.

Review
Micmacs
With one notable exception (yes, the one with the melted-Dairylea alien-thing), Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s films are rich, textured and enjoyably eccentric affairs, and have deservedly earned him favourable comparisons with the likes of Gilliam and Burton. But Jeunet’s style and vision, which reached its apogee in Amélie, offers more consistent results than either of those filmmakers (helped, naturally, by the fact that he’s made fewer pictures). While you could dismiss him as an acquired taste, he’s also a director whose passion for cinema hones his visual mastery. His movies — like those of the Coens, and Tarantino, even — take place in worlds whose lifeforms evolved from Keaton and Pickford rather than slime-moulds and lungfish, in universes created by the puffing of the Lumières’ locomotive rather than a Big Bang.

This has never been more apparent than in Micmacs (or Micmacs À Tire-Larigot, to use its full, none-more-Gallic title), which is so steeped in cinema that it steals Chaplin’s antics, Kurosawa’s plots (Yojimbo and Seven Samurai lurk around every corner) and Max Steiner’s score for The Big Sleep. Jeunet, ever unafraid to namecheck his inspirations, has also stated that Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs, Toy Story and the Mission: Impossible TV series feed into his tale of placid manchild Bazil’s (Dany Boon) quest to take on the arms manufacturers who robbed him of his father via a landmine, then created the bullet that remains lodged in his brain and may possibly send him to his maker at any moment.

Reluctantly enlisting the aid of a band of oddball destitutes — a tiny, mechanical-sculpture-crafting old man with the strength of five Geoff Capes; a semi-autistic Amélie clone who can calculate anything in seconds; a petulant female contortionist who sleeps in the fridge etc. — the plot pinballs zanily around Bazil’s elaborate plan to deal poetic justice to this pair of arms dealers.

The result plays out like Amélie’s little life-improving schemes, albeit with a revenge motive and a team of conspirators. Lacking the vast resources of their quarry (whose richness is so atrocious it most grossly manifests itself in one dealer’s penchant for collecting embalmed body parts of expired historical figures), Bazil and co. prove to be genius improvisers — in one case performing a daring heist with a household alarm clock, a human cannonball and a goldfish bowl full of wasps.

It’s impressively inventive and entertainingly convoluted stuff, like a brilliant low-rent sideshow that’s bluffed its way into becoming the main attraction. But while virtually every frame creaks with inspiration, you can’t help but come away feeling there’s something missing. Perhaps it’s to do with being so conditioned to expect a pay-off for every set-up. The extensive film-referencing comes, to a great degree, out of the fact that the pre-brainwound Bazil is a movie nut. We are encouraged to believe we’re actually seeing the world through his mind-damaged perception. In one scene, for example, an entire orchestra is revealed behind Bazil, playing the score. He slaps his head irritably and they disappear in a blink. Which raises the question, further encouraged by the character beginning the main plot in a coma: how much of what we’re watching is really happening? And that, sadly, is all it remains: a question.

A more significant issue is Bazil himself. Whereas Amélie had at its heart a lovable, luminous brunette imp, here we have a large, blank-faced man of few words. And he’s nowhere near as engaging. Dany Boon is a big deal in his homeland, being a massively successful one-man show, and creator of France’s biggest homegrown box-office hit (Bienvenue Chez Les Ch’tis), so maybe if you’re French — and more specifically Jeunet, looking for someone to cast after the person for whom you wrote the lead role (Jamel Debbouze) pulled out — Boon’s charisma is self-evident. But it has yet to travel. We get that Bazil is shellshocked, but it does rather seem like Boon’s coasting, or at least failing to find the heart of his character while he’s too busy playing on the surface: the studied look of disinterest, the slouch, the shrugs, the by-the-numbers Chaplin-imitation. You may not be surprised to find that Boon started out as a mime.

Not that this derails the Jeunet Express. It retains its own rusting-clockwork charm, and while it may not bring in many newcomers, those already won over by Delicatessen, The City Of Lost Children and Amélie (and they are legion) won’t regret their return.


Verdict
Jeunet himself describes the film best: Delicatessen meets Amélie. But we’d add that, while it’s certainly breezy fun, it’s not quite as good as either.


Reviewed by Dan Jolin

Write Your Review
To write your review please login or register.

Your Reviews

Average user rating for Micmacs
Empire Star Rating

This film was incredible, I went in unenthusiastically and was very pleasantly surprised. Very highly recomended ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by transbluent at 21:34, 15 June 2012 | Report This Post


Tragic. ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by reminn at 12:02, 03 November 2010 | Report This Post


Micmacs

Micmacs is funny, stylish and a true orginal but it might prove a little to quirky for some tastes. ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by Soprano168 at 20:23, 13 May 2010 | Report This Post


Go see this instead of Alice in Wonderland

So much more visually entertaining. http://tinybeamoflight.com/2010/02/20/ micmacs-2009-dir-jean-pierre-jeunet/ ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by stuffit at 00:11, 08 March 2010 | Report This Post


RE: Micmacs

Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet Screenwriters: Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Guillaume Laurant Starring: Dany Boon, Dominique Pinon, Andre Dussollier, Nicolas Marie, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Julie Ferrier, Yolande Moreau Synopsis After surviving a bullet in the head, Bazil (Boon) an ex-videostore clerk joins a group of misfits to come up with an intricate and original plan to destroy two big weapons manufacturers. Review After working many years on adapting Yann Martel’s fantasy adventure Lif... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by R W at 20:02, 27 February 2010 | Report This Post


Awesome! (minor spoilers)

Saw this film at the Glasgow Film Fest and was amazed at how good it was. I love how Jeunet used posters of the film within the film. Jeunet continues his tradition of keeping to the stereotypes of french people in movies to make the world seem unreal yet charming. ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by JamesMalcolm at 13:01, 24 February 2010 | Report This Post


Boony Marvellous

Loved it! Funny film and a really enjoyable watch! ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by danclay77 at 12:45, 23 February 2010 | Report This Post


I loved it too!

http://tinybeamoflight.com/2010/02/20/micmacs-2009-dir- jean-pierre-jeunet/ ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by stuffit at 01:20, 20 February 2010 | Report This Post


I loved it, that's my review, that's right... I suck. ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by odddaze at 13:08, 15 February 2010 | Report This Post


I loved it, that's my review, that's right... I suck. ... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by odddaze at 13:07, 15 February 2010 | Report This Post



CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
The Hangover Part III Cast & Crew Interviews
Cooper, Galifianakis, Helms, Jeong, Bartha, Graham and Phillips!

Edgar Wright's Essential Movie Music Playlist
Listen to the seventeen tunes and cues of the World’s End director’s life

Cannes Film Festival Videblogisode #4
With Alec Baldwin and James Toback plus longstanding videblog-guest Stephen Woolley

Empire's Great Gatsby Video Interviews
Leonardo DiCaprio! Carey Mulligan! Tobey Maguire! Joel Edgerton! Baz Luhrmann!

The Biggest Doctor Who Jaw-Droppers
The Time Lord's biggest surprises over 50 years of TV

Quicksilver & Scarlet Witch: A Beginner's Guide To The Avengers 2 Newcomers
Your primer on the brother and sister joining the A-team

Clint Mansell On Making Requiem For A Dream
'Darren had to edit at night because he could get access to the studio for free then.'

Subscribe For Only £20
Get Dead Island: Riptide and six issues of Empire for only £20! Subscribe now
Steven Spielberg iPad App
Hollywood's most beloved director in this unique iPad special. Download now
Empire iPad Edition
The world's biggest movie magazine available on iPad Download now
Home  |  News  |  Blogs  |  Reviews  |  Future Films  |  Features  |  Interviews  |  Images  |  Competitions  |  Forum  |  iPad  |  Podcast  |  Magazine Contact Us  |  Empire FAQ  |  Subscribe To Empire  |  Register
© Bauer Consumer Media  |  Terms And Conditions  |  Our Data Promise To You  |  Bauer Entertainment Network
Bauer Consumer Media. Company number 1176085 (England). Registered Office: 21 Holborn Viaduct, London EC1A 2DY