It is strange that a country who gave us the grandfather of SF novels Jules Verne and the first pioneer in SF movies Georges Méliés isn't a leading world SF power.
There are so few real SF movies in France, comparing to the strength of their cinematography both in quantity and in quality. Supernatural, yes, from old, incredible and unforgettable "Marianne de ma jeunesse" to minor but beautiful modern flicks like "Va, petite". Throughout history we can find several great and/or popular SF movies like "Alphaville", "451 Fahrenheit" or "Fifth Element", but they are rare as galaxies in the endless space.
"A ton image" is a real SF, but made as a sub-genre that has been spreading for several decades in American production: the plot is not SF, at least not a classic one, but only one premise of the whole movie is fantastic. So once you accept that this premise is real, you don't feel that you watch SF movie any more, because the development of the plot is perfectly logical and realistic.
And in this case if you accept that human clones can be made (what is more than certain), and that they already exist among us (what hasn't been proved so far), you probably have some idea what their problems (and ones of their family, friends, teachers etc) might be. We can have prejudices that come from science (this movie includes some suspicions from early days of cloning the mammals when the movie was made, but haven't been proved to be a scientific truth later) or from another movies (even horrors). And "A ton image" uses all clichés they could remember.
However, apart from SF, the movie is surprisingly fresh. So we get a feeling that (once again) French authors didn't even care to make a decent SF but only used some of its premises as a basis or background of a family drama. No wonder: this is something where French are at their best.
The authors are interested in the family. Already in danger, on the edge of collapse and extinction, the family life created by father, mother and child(ren) will face new challenges and perils. If a person can be given a clone, then single parent family gets a new meaning. The other parent, even if on the list of family members, loses all traditional roles (but, as we can see, can be given new ones); however, though a family life can be hard and stressful due to differences of its participants, the equality of them can also be hard or impossible to handle.
Also, the authors cleverly decided to avoid usual family problems and family relations that are endlessly repeating in movies during a decade or two. There are no drugs, but alcohol is a real problem (yes, in 21st century). The mother's dark secret is not a child molestation in early years. And (blasphemy for modern movies) the daughter still approaching teenage years tries to seduce her father (it can happen, gentlemen from police and social services!) and her father resists (yes, it can happen as well, though modern movies and TV programs tell us that every man is a predator just for having Y-chromosome, and a molester just by the fact he is a father). So I wonder if this movie will ever be allowed to cross the ocean.
Christopher Lambert is better than I've ever seen him (that isn't a compliment) and Nastassia Kinski... I won't comment her acting because for me she is a reason good enough to watch any movie. Anyway, her acting is light years away from her "Tess" period when she used to have expression No 1, No 2 and No 3 and change them at random. With a lot of help of young Audrey DeWilder and less young Rufus the very variegated casting list does an unexpectedly good job. Good camera work and editing can hide some weakness in the screenplay. Anyway, this is a movie that should be given a chance.
5 out of 5 found this helpful.
Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink