I Want to Go Home
**

by Fernando F. Croce on February 20, 2008
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I Want to Go Home has a splenetic oddball quality at odds with the evanescent tendencies of Alain Resnais's later films. In an antic mood, the veteran filmmaker decides that a cartoonist's mind is no less tumultuous than a poet's, and gets acerbic comic-strip doyen Jules Feiffer and the weirdest cast available to weave a satirical view of Franco-American culture clash. Cleveland cartoonist Joey Wellman (famed MGM musical writer Adolph Green) travels reluctantly for an exhibition of his work in Paris, where his estranged, resentful daughter Elsie (Laura Benson) is trying to purge her American roots by studying Flaubert under the renowned scholar Christian Gauthier (Gerard Depardieu, struggling valiantly with his phonetic English). The cranky protagonist's creations, Hep Cat and Sally Cat, pop up in animated thought balloons to comment on the action; meanwhile, the live-action cartoons include Linda Lavin as Green's shrugging companion, Micheline Presle as Depardieu's randy mom, and John Ashton as a Gallic vision of Yankee crudeness, all brought together for a costume party that's meant as a Looney Tunes version of The Rules of the Game. Resnais's compositions are deliberately cramped to suggest panels in a comic strip, but where the same approach created a sustained feeling of strangeness in Robert Altman's underrated Popeye (also written by Feiffer), here it mostly feels tiresomely garrulous. A truly strange brew perpetually inviting disaster yet somehow always eluding the abyss, I Want to Go Home is an inexplicable item but an affable one, the work of a buoyantly tranquil artist amusing himself with a doodle.

Image/Sound:

The transfer is visually and aurally suitable, meaning that the flatness of the film's sounds and images is accurately captured.

Extras:

Producer Marin Karmitz reveals his personal fondness for the film in an interview, recalling its negative reception by critics while finding profound themes of aging and death in it. The theatrical trailer is also included.

Overall:

"I much prefer Daffy Duck to Donald Duck." Finally a pensée I can get behind.


Disc Ratings:
Image:
**½
Sound:
**
Extras:
Overall:
**
Disc Features:
Specifications:
  • DVD-Video
  • Region 1
  • Dual-Layer Disc
Aspect Ratio:
  • 1.66:1 Anamorphic Widescreen
Dolby Digital Formats:
  • French 1.0 Mono
DTS Digital Formats:
  • None
Subtitles/Captions:
  • English Subtitles
Special Features:
  • Interview with Producer Marin Karmitz
  • Theatrical Trailer

  • Director(s): Alain Resnais
  • Screenplay: Jules Feiffer, Alain Resnais
  • Cast: Adolph Green, Gerard Depardieu, Linda Lavin, Laura Benson, Micheline Presle, John Ashton, Geraldine Chaplin, Ludivine Sagnier
  • Distributor: Kino International
  • Street Date: February 19, 2008
  • Runtime: 110 min.
  • Rating: NR
  • Year: 1989


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