She accidentally finds a boy's toys and effects box in her apartment and vows to track him down and return it. She enacts the urban myth of sending one of her father's garden gnomes around the world so that he receives self made postcards from everywhere (that her flight attendant friend goes). She brightens the life of the reclusive invalid painter downstairs who repeatedly copies a Renoir picture which he treats as though he is experiencing the scene for real. Through more accidents she meets a young man who is obsessed with the torn up selfies from a photo booth of a plain looking older man. It's a mystery that unfolds after an extraordinary campaign by Amelie to pursue and land the questing lad. These are just a few strands of the weave.
Jean-Pierre Jeunet began his directorial career in close collaboration with Marc Caro. Their approach involved giving breathtaking whimsy a solid narrative base and a pallet that would make David Lynch envious and a design sense as rich as the best of the contemporary steampunk graphic novels. the extraordinary Delicatessen and The City of Lost Children wowed everyone who saw them. The spat, when it came, was over whether to take Mammon's shilling and make an Alien sequel and the rift did not mend.
So that when Jeunet got together with writer Guillaume Laurant to create a multi-threaded celebration of life in Paris that took in nostalgia, desire, love, invention, loneliness, jealousy, cruelty and so on, they put a girl made of purest quirk at the centre, wound her up and pointed her at different characters. And at a time when Oliver Stone was still trying to pass his feature films off as student films and Tarantino was still pretending his ever-longer cinematic karaoke was the most vital cinema could get, Amelie moved at a clip, looking only like itself that used anything they could find to show it all in tones so golden and scenes so fast that you didn't have time to swoon.
If Fellini cast his more extravagant pieces from faces alone to create his beautiful nightmares of Rome, Jeunet did the same with Paris, collecting a multitude that resembled everything between Tintin and Pieter Breughel the Elder. At the centre they put Audrey Tautou whose range at first appears to bang against both ends of the whimsy barrier but soon enough displays depth and gravitas. The light-generating smile and huge-eyed gasp are soon joined by the darkness streaming through the failure at the bottom of every possibility in every thread.
She is called to show pain and allows us access to it without cloying. Is that a relief after the onslaught of her beauty and cuteness? The scene of her restraint in outing herself to her would be lover in the cafe as they stand, separated by a glass pane on which she pretends to write the day's menu has an ache too familiar to anyone who has hesitated when confronted with a life-heavy opportunity. We remember that she came from loving but undemonstrative parents and was kept away from the world until adulthood. She's not a Snow White, she's a Parisian.
This is, despite the impression I've probably created here, a feast of Gallic twee. Jeunet's handling of the myriad expressions of a few themes and managing to ground it in a sense of real life is a success. This film is joyful because it remembers the alternative to joy, the same way that Harold and Maude never lets its audience forget the dark smoke of Maude's life and how she came to be so life affirming (that happens in a single shot without dialogue). I was going to go on a tirade against the adoration of Wes Anderson by his fans when all he does is turn Pinterest pages into flat kitsch but anyone who knows me on the topic is sick and tired of hearing it and anyone new to it will probably just get annoyed.
Jeunet still gets work in his industry. There were two other features after this but the sadness of the times to come were not so friendly to paying his expensive visions. My hope is that there is more to come and that, however horrible things become we can be touched by a joy as thrilling, solid and geniune as Amelie.
Viewing notes: I watched my old Blu-Ray of Amelie which presents it as beautifully as it's ever going to be beyond my first viewing at the cinema in 2001 (Jeunet is a grump when it comes to 4K). The only problem with this is that it forces about four trailers for other French movies on you before you get to the main menu,. You can chapter-skip through these but what a horrible hangover from the 2000s! It's available with subscriptions to Prime and Stan and, these days, the BD out of print, only on DVD through retail.






