30
Jul/12

MOVIES UNDER THE STARS: AMELIE

30
Jul/12

Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s AMELIE is one of the most charming films of the new century

SUMMER ON THE HUDSON: LA FABULEUX DESTIN d’AMELIE POULAIN (Jean-Pierre Jeunet, 2001)
Riverside Park, Pier 1 at 70th St.
Wednesday, August 1, free
www.riversideparkfund.org

In Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s wildly inventive romantic comedy, Audrey Tautou plays one of the most delightful, charming characters since, well, dare we say it? Audrey Hepburn, especially from Roman Holiday. Everybody in this film is nuts; Amélíe wanders — always with some strange, curious purpose — through offbeat and humorous situations filled with obsessive-compulsive oddballs doing bizarre things while sharing their crazy likes and dislikes with the audience. A difficult childhood left the grown-up Amélíe unable to interact “normally” with people, so when she discovers a boy’s treasure box hidden in her apartment, she decides to track down the owner, leading to a series of very complex and emotional good deeds she does for others while she cannot figure out her own life, which undergoes a major change when she meets Nino (Mathieu Kassovitz) — who collects ripped-up pictures people throw out after using public photo booths — and becomes friendly with the Glass Man (Serge Merlin), who cannot go outside because his bones are too brittle, so he remains in his apartment, copying the same Renoir painting year after year, unable to capture one girl’s face properly. Jeunet’s aural and visual style is reminiscent of such Coen brothers films as Raising Arizona, with fast-moving shots, sudden close-ups, and blasts of sound that enliven this masterful film. Amélíe is screening on August 1 at Pier 1 in Riverside Park as part of the Movies under the Stars series, which continues August 8 with Pee Wee’s Big Adventure and concludes August 15 with Triplets of Belleville.