New, Drama, Romance,TVN, Netflix, Rom-com, Action, Mystery, JTBC, Korean drama, Medical drama, Comedy-drama, Thriller, Fantasy television, iQIYI, Sci-fi, Studio Dragon, Song Kang, Free, Lee Do-hyun, Kim Won-hae
Nevertheless, Jumbo remains a pretty far-out proposition. If Collins and Maconie's Movie Club was still around to hand out its Rum Film of the Week, this would win at a canter, and its integral perversity will surely catch John Waters' eye at some point down the line. There are cinematic precedents: I was reminded in places of the relationship between the kid and the Iron Giant or the kids and the kindlier Transformers, films where expressive nuts and bolts provide a means of escape from dull, earthbound reality. (Here, that reality is represented by blowsily overbearing maman Emmanuelle Bercot and the fairground's resident bullies.) Jumbo, too, is quite childlike, even childish in its outlook, and you'd have to be fairly wide-eyed to buy it whole: while less intense than she was in Portrait, Merlant commits 100% to the role of a Martian fairytale princess. How that innocence squares with such images as Jeanne bathing topless in engine oil is anybody's guess, though, and I don't think even Wittock has figured it out. She compensates with nice, atmospheric shots of the ride in action, swathed in plumes of dry ice and apparently enjoying a life of its own, but Jumbo never permits us normies a clear enough line on the flesh-and-blood half of its equation. Is Jeanne a problem child, to be pitied, or a free thinker, to be cheered? As it is, she emerges as but a curious case; much like the film that bears her beloved's name, you'll either get her or you won't. Granted, there's nowt so queer as folk, but Wittock appears to be circling an even trickier point: that female desire, in particular, is turbulent, unpredictable, perhaps even unfathomable on some level.
Jumbo is now playing in selected cinemas, and streaming via Curzon Home Cinema and the BFI Player.
0 Comments: