We all have a preconceptions of what a Christmas movie is. We usually think of it as something optimistic, simple and heartwarming. Arnaud Desplechin's A Christmas Tale is none of those things. The characters are not always likable, many points of the film are pretty pessimistic, and the story is not told in a traditional manner. Heck this movie even contains quotes from Neizche's On the Genealogy of Morality. This film is purely a French art film, and far from a Hollywood Christmas movie. However this film has a unique beauty all it's own.
The story involves the Vuillard family. After Junon (played by Catherine Deneuve) the grandmother of the family needs a bone marrow transplant. This happens just in time for the family to get together for Christmas. Two members of the family have the same blood type as Junon. These are the mental ill teenager Paul (played by Emile Berling) and Henri (played by Mathieu Amalric), her son. Paul is afraid that a blood transfer might reveal weather or not Claude (played by Hippolyte Girardot) is his real father. Meanwhile Slyvia (played by Chiara Mastroianna) finds out that along with her husband Ivan (played by Melvil Populaud), Henri and Simon (played by Laurent Capelluto) liked her as well and they decided Ivan should be the one to have her, this leads to an affair between Slyvia and Simon.
This story doesn't sound like your typical Christmas movie and it isn't. However what it is is a beautiful and thought provoking portrait of the type of family you don't see often in movies center around this time of year. It is also a study of life and death. Well this may sound like movie that has a lot of art but little entertainment that is not completely true. Moments such as the kids' play and a very awkward giving of grace are actually quite funny and add a nice contrast with the more serious and philosophical scenes. However this does not make the philosophical scenes any less profound or moving. It is clear that screenwriters Arnaud Desplechin (also the film's director) and Emmanuel Bourdieu (who also cowrote My Sex Life...or How I Got Into an Argument (Desplechian also directed that film)) really were passionate about what they were writing. Add to this a great score by Mike Kourtzer, outstanding cinematography by Eric Gautier and great performances by the whole cast and you have got an amazing film.
This film is an incredible experience and one of the best Christmas movies of recent years.
-Michael J. Ruhland
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