
Times
Have Been Better
Le Ciel sur la tete
PictureThis!
Entertainment,
2006
Director:
Regis Musset
Screenplay:
Nicolas Mercier
Starring:
Arnaud Binard, Charlotte de Turckheim, Bernard Le Coq, Olivier Gueritee,
Pierre Deny, Franck de la Personne, Chantal Ladesou
Unrated, 93 minutes
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Life
Goes On
by
Michael D. Klemm
Posted online, September, 2008

Coming out stories
can be a dime a dozen and I once wrote, perhaps unfairly, that I never
wanted to see another one again. But, like any genre, the coming out tale
can be a cliche-fest or the writer can rise to the occasion and give it
a new spin. It is possible to ignore the standard formulas and
devise situations that are honest, convincing and real. It helps when
it's done without resorting to slapstick and melodrama. Laughter is the
best medicine and, as anyone who has ever studied the plays of Moliere
knows, the French write delightful comedies that are lightyears ahead
of the average sitcom.
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In
Times Have Been Better, Jeremy
(Arnaud Binard) is the ideal son. He is 33, handsome, and successful.
He has two big announcements to share with his family; he's just received
a major promotion at the bank where he works, and he has just moved in
with his artist boyfriend, Marc (Pierre Deny). But he has a dilemma. His
parents have no idea that their son is gay and the news is about to rock
their world.
Before we become
acquainted with Jeremy, we meet his family. Guy, the father (Bernard Le
Coq) is first seen wearing a flowered apron while singing and dancing
to rock music on the radio as he cooks breakfast. "Parents are funny,"
the younger son, Robin (Olivier Gueritee) remarks in voice-over, "They
may be the only people you can admire and find tacky at the same time."
Jeremy is coming in from Paris for an unexpected visit and Rosin, the
mother, (Charlotte de Turckheim) is convinced
that he is coming with bad news. Robin knows his brother's secret and
is surprised when Jeremy tells him that he plans to come out today. "Our
parents are liberal," Jeremy says, "they won't care."
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The
next scenes are small masterpieces of subtle comic timing and audience
misdirection. Is he going to tell them or what? Each opportunity fails.
When they play the grandchildren card, he finally blurts out the truth
and the parents are speechless. Before they can react, Guy's two tennis
buddies show up to meet the "wonder boy" son. When Guy tries to make awkward
conversation and rather blandly announces Jeremy's work promotion, one
of his friends remarks "You don't seem very accepting of it." Jeremy
has to catch a train for Paris and life goes on... sort of.
Jeremy's parents
discover that they are not as liberal as they once thought. Guy gets more
and more annoyed as all his friends and co-workers congratulate him on
Jeremy's promotion when all he can think of is his son's boyfriend.
Every conversation brims with unintentional innuendo. A woman looks at
Jeremy's picture and says "all the girls must be after him." All
of this, along with the contrasting scenes where Guy and Rosin broach
the subject to their friends, is very funny without being in the least
bit rude. Guy seems to be taking the news worse than Rosin who, in turn,
is beginning to find her husband's anger irritating. "How can anyone make
love to a man?" he snarls with disgust. At this exact moment, she walks
into the room, is taken aback by his comment, and then mutters under her
breath, "Indeed, how?" Guy begins smoking again and takes his wife's sleeping
pills. Sedated, he drifts off to sleep and asks "Do you think he gets
buggered?"
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In
fact, Guy seems obsessed with the sexual dimension to their son's declaration
of queerness. His tennis buddies, who haven't a clue what they are talking
about, assure him that there's always a "queen" and a "man" when two guys
do it and that Jeremy is obviously the man. Younger son Robin still
lives with them and he feels that Mom and Dad are taking out their frustrations
on him. When Robin shouts "I don't ask if you bugger Mom," his father slaps
him. Robin will embark on a rebellion of his own when he decides to follow
his dream by taking a job with a film crew rather than attend college and
this just adds to the tension. Meanwhile, Mom and Dad drive to Paris to
see Jeremy's swanky new apartment and also to meet his boyfriend, Marc.
Guy initially drives the wrong way and Rosin has a quiet epiphany in the
passenger seat as she realizes that she and her husband are moving in different
directions and have grown worlds apart. |
The
emphasis here is more on the parents' journey to acceptance but this isn't
one of those well-meaning, yet awful "problem of the week" American TV movies
from the 1980s (so hated by Vito Russo in The Celluloid Closet) that
always favored the family while marginalizing the gay protagonist into an
almost non-entity. Guy and Rosin don't go totally mental over their son's
news but they aren't dealing with it very well either. Their reactions are
very realistic, adding to its comedy, which makes watching Times
Have Been Better a complete delight. For example, when the
parents meet Marc (who is an attractive man but clearly older than Jeremy),
Rosin wants to both scream and crack up laughing. As they all sit down to
dinner, Rosin angers her husband by joking about the way he dances in a
flowered apron whenever he's in the kitchen. The insights are authentic
and what could have been a conventional film is still very queer. |
Nicolas
Mercier's writing is sharp. Robin exposes his father's hypocrisy when he
reminds him that he had "free love" when he came of age in the 60s
and it was just an excuse to get laid. "You guys got it all wrong," he says,
wise for his youth, "It took a disease for you to acknowledge gay guys."
This is heavy stuff, mixed with dialogue that is reminiscent of Oscar Wilde
for its wit. "Introducing your parents isn't a great aphrodisiac," Mark
remarks when Jeremy isn't in the mood and pulls away from him. Rosin's gay
boss, Yvan (Franck de la Personne), delivers many bitchy one-liners and
tells her to stop being "St. Rosin, patron saint of gay men's Moms." |
Among
the film's many strengths are the finely drawn and fully rounded characters.
These are not one-dimensional ciphers. The best comedies sometimes almost
make you cry; I'm thinking here of that rare film like Charlie Chaplin's
City Lights. Consider this moment: Tempers flare between the parents
and Rosin walks out. Hanging out in a Paris gay bar with her boss, Rosin
meets a suave gentleman (think a French Ricardo Montalban) who sweeps her
off her feet. I won't give away what happens but, when he kisses her, Rosin
remembers what it feels like to be a woman again and Charlotte de Turckheim's
performance in this scene is one for the ages. This incident, along with
the many other developments during the film, justifies Rosin's rebuke to
Jeremy that "since you came home last weekend everything went wrong." While
watching those afore-mentioned TV movies, we cringed when the mothers spouted
similar stuff but my reaction was different here; probably because the poor
woman is right. |
Things are perhaps
tied up a bit too neatly at the end but, in this case, it doesn't ring
false. One leaves the film feeling that there might be some closure here
but also that they still have a lot of unresolved issues to deal with.
In any case, the journey there is what matters. Life goes on. This is
a beautifully shot, acted and directed film. While it doesn't break any
new ground, director Regis Musset isn't trying to be the next Godard either.
Times Have Been Better is
a solidly crafted, and entertaining story, and what else should one ask
for? Check this one out, you'll be charmed.
Charlotte de Turckheim
also appears in:
A Love To Hide
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