An Appreciation by Jerry Saravia
"Amelie" is a young, innocent, kind French woman that I wish I knew. The historic Parisian town of Montmartre is a place I would love to live in. That is until you realize that the town exists but not in the way depicted in "Amelie." A young woman like the beaming Amelie working as a waitress at a Parisian cafe may not exist either. That is the movies for you! "Amelie" is a wonderful romantic fantasy about a selfless, imaginative woman who wants to do right by others until she realizes she can also do right by herself.
Audrey Tautou is Amelie, a performance on par in my distinct cinema memory with Giulietta Masina's performance in the riveting and partly whimsical "The Nights of Cabiria." Of course, Amelie the character and the movie are completely different from Fellini's film. The film explodes with a colorful feast of vignettes, from Amelie's early years as a precocious child seeking her father's love, to the accidental death of her mother and to her years as a young woman seeking men and working in the cafe, an actual cafe in Montmartre called "Café des 2 Moulins." Amelie notices certain details that others might not notice, like the fly as seen in a background scene from the film "Jules and Jim." She also notes a grocer's irrational behavior to his co-worker - the grocer lives in her apartment building and she gets even with him in unexpected, non-violent ways. During the sad news broadcast of Lady Di's death, Amelie is shocked to find a box containing personal items and trinkets hidden in one of the bathroom panels. She finds the owner of the box, a 50-year old man, and when he discovers it in a phone booth where he hears the phone ringing, it so elated me, it so moved me that I just wanted to hug Amelie for an amazingly empathetic gesture. She also does wonders for her idiosyncratic father (Rufus) - an invalid only in his mind - with a traveling garden gnome that just made me laugh like crazy. There are others Amelie helps and each of their situations develops so exquisitely and tastefully that you'll be hoodwinked and bedazzled by the narrative construction.
If "Amelie" had centered only on Amelie's good deeds that she performs unbeknownst to the people she helps, it would have been a real winner already. The movie also crosses into Amelie's discovery of romance for a man she barely knows, a sweet good-natured man known as Nino Quincampoix (Mathieu Kassovitz) who collects discarded, sometimes torn photos from photo booths. So Amelie helps people with attaining happiness in their lives, and she is smitten with a man who finds solace in photos of people he collects and keeps in a photo album. The stars of romance become aligned and Amelie better take that leap - it may be a chance that she may regret not taking.
"Amelie" is so life-affirming, so precious in tone and style with abundant uses of the colors red and green that it could be too much of a good thing for most - the vibrant colors show how much passion and zest she has for life. The film is heavily stylized by director Jean Pierre-Jeunet ("Delicatessen") yet it proved to be very satisfying - like a cup of hot chocolate that brings warmth to your body and mind. Amelie has that effect on people and, it turns out, on herself. She sees herself in a Renoir painting that the older downstairs neighbor (Serge Merlin), who has very brittle bones, paints a replica of every year. She helps a mean grocer become kind in ways that you have to discover for yourself. Amelie is an angel and her beatific smile and puppy dog eyes alone should be just cause for any jaded person to smile a little and feel a sense of comfort. Maybe there aren't people exactly like Amelie in the world but one can only hope. I adore "Amelie" with all the heart and soul I can muster.






