Summer Hours is
a slow-moving, at times poignantly observant family tale that never quite comes
together as a whole. From a relatively simple premise – a French
upper-middle-class family’s dispersion of their mother’s inheritance after her
death – Olivier Assayas examines modern French bourgeoisie’s complex negotiations
with its own cultural heritage in a globalized era, yet too often loses sight
of that subject in favour of narrative technicalities.
Hélène (Édith Scob) has lived a full life. When we are
first introduced to her, she’s laughing at her eldest son Frédéric’s (Charles
Berling) clumsily opened bottle of champagne in celebration of her 75th
birthday, basking in the presence of her children and grandchildren with the
matter-of-fact serenity of someone who knows they have everything they could
ever reasonably expect to need. Their big birthday gift to her, as one might
expect from practical-minded 21st century people, is a three-unit
telephone set – “that way, you won’t have to run around.” explains her daughter
Adrienne (Juliette Binoche, sporting a distractingly unconvincing blonde wig).
The old woman reacts with befuddlement, then with annoyance, and finally with a
resigned laugh. In 3 shots and 32 seconds, Assayas has subtly summarized his
story’s primary theme and arc: the inescapable prevalence of time and the
sacrifices we must concede to it.
As family-reunion drama customs would have it, Hélène
bears a family secret the likes of which is generally kept as deeply entombed
as possible for appearances’ sake. Yet one of the small beauties of Summer Hours is that hers is hidden in
plain sight in the form of highly valuable paintings and drawings by her
beloved uncle Paul Berthier, along with other sculptures and furniture that she
intends to pass on to her children upon her death. Her children’s reluctant
decision to sell these belongings to various buyers – including the house
itself – is inextricably tied to their unwillingness to see and confront the
part of their past that they all represent.
The decision to push Hélène’s incestuous affair with her
uncle into the characters’ subconscious rather than explicitly make it the
story’s driving force is a psychologically astute one, and the film’s best
scenes are those in which Assayas lets his characters’ feelings timidly emerge from
behind their banal words and half-concealed glances. Unfortunately, his film loses
its emotional and political heart in long conversation scenes in which lawyers,
civil servants and family members go over the details of the inheritance
sharing process using plain-spoken dialogue that aims for naturalism but only
achieves the kind of turgid triviality usually heard on French television.
The lifelessness of these scenes is all the more
disappointing when you remember the sneakily incisive lines that peppered the
first half of the film, such as Adrienne and her younger brother Jérémie’s wife
Angela (Valérie Bonneton) citing their and their children’s lack of attachment
to France as an additional point in favour of their decision to continue their
lives and careers overseas. “French is the language we speak at home”, Angela
casually tells us over a glass of wine, her inflection on the first word’s last
syllable implying a “nothing more” that her next words all but confirm. These
little moments expose a contentious point of fracture in modern France that
Olivier Assayas himself, with his many multilingual
films and
American stars,
embodies to a T: the globalization of its cultural elite and their perceived
disconnection from the roots of the art, literature and cinema they create. Voluntarily
or not, this underlying political theme informs the characters’ struggles,
evasions and uncertainties, and remains mostly unaddressed in the film’s
sluggish second act.
And then, miraculously, Frédéric’s woes as a parent smash
it back into the picture like a wake-up call. His daughter’s arrest for
trafficking stolen clothes and possession of marijuana reveals his own
immaturity (“I don’t get caught!” he
retorts to her remark on his own consumption of drugs) and potential legacy as
a parent and cultural forebear. Think of the entire post-release scene as a
quietly political riff on the infamous “I learned it by watching you!” PSA. This undercurrent
reaches its final destination in an ending sequence that mirrors the opening
images of Frédéric’s teens accompanying their younger cousins in their treasure
hunt across the ancestral home grounds. The teens are still there, now
accompanied by classmates and friends their own age as they prepare a wild
party in a house that no longer belongs to them. The simple innocence of the
earlier images may be gone but the lust for life animating them still remains,
in the form of long tracking shots that capture young Sylvie (Alice De Lencquesaing) in suspended
states of emotion and sensation, somewhere between busyness and fun, banality
and joy, conflict and peace. It would be easy, especially given the underlying
theme’s inherent appeal to reactionaries, to see this vision of teens
installing speakers, smoking joints and occupying rooms for partying and
presumed sex as a condemnation of ignorant, spoilt millennials trespassing on
their ancestors’ lands with neither respect nor understanding for what they
represent, but Assayas chooses instead to film it as a place fulfilling the
purpose it always had: to welcome life and build memories. This final compromise
may not provide all the answers to the complicated issues of transmission and
inheritance in the context of France’s very particular model and history, but
its hopeful eloquence speaks more convincingly than any polemical text ever
could.
At its best, Summer
Hours meditates on filial and cultural identity with intelligent empathy
that Olivier Assayas’s camera expresses in dimmed colours and artful days-for-nights,
evocatively completed by his familiar fade-to-black closings. Regrettably, his
subsequent neglect of his characters’ interior journeys fails to deliver on
these visual promises, suggesting an uneven grasp of the subject matter and
resulting in a film that resembles its central character in all the wrong ways:
confused, semi-oblivious and emotionally incomplete.