Le Havre
Written and Directed By: Aki KaurismäkiStarring: Andre Wilms, Kati Outinen, Jean-Pierre Darroussin, Blondin Miguel, Roberto Piazza, and Laika.
Director of Photography: Timo Salminen, Editor: Timo Linnasalo, Production Designer: Wouter Zoon
Rated: Unrated, but truly a film for the whole family.
A correction to the location of the town "Le Havre" has been made. The town is located in France, not Finland, though the film and its director are Finnish.
Le Havre, a very witty and adorable
comedy from French director Aki Kaurismäki, is best watched with a nice
cappuccino, as the sweetness of the characters and world reverberates through every frame. You might
not think it if you read the film’s synopsis, which concerns an old poor man, his
terminally ill wife, and the smuggling of an illegal immigrant to London. But
in Mr. Kaurismäki’s world, none of that is really too stern, who instead paints
a world of nostalgic delight on a costal town in France. It’s the type of
place you may have thought went extinct decades ago, and perhaps that is true,
except Mr. Kaurismäki wants us to believe in fairy tales nonetheless.
The
action begins with a scene of absurd comedy as Marcel Marx stands in a train
station, waiting for the next customer at his shoeshine. A man sits down, but is
cautiously watched by a couple of men in dark coats. When the man leaves, he
runs and is shot down. “Luckily he had time to pay me,” Marcel smugly remarks before
leaving himself. We soon learn Marcel lives a simple though not unrewarding
life: nights at the local bar, friends at the bakery, and an adoring wife who
truly loves him, taking care of his every needs. But she suddenly becomes ill
with cancer, leaving Marcel alone.