Adam is slowly changing | Perfectly offbeat

Adam is slowly changing, literally. His body changes according to the low blows, insults of all kinds, which come here and there. Foray into the life of a 15-year-old teenager (paunchy).




UFO film, halfway between the initiatory story and the (parodied) adolescent comedy, Adam is slowly changing is an elusive little gem, both hilarious and heartbreaking, extremely uncomfortable. We’re laughing all the way through this first feature film, awarded at several festivals, by Joël Vaudreuil, who we knew was the drummer for Avec pas d’casque, who we discover here as a keen observer of the teenage population, circa 1990.

It takes place in a time long ago when children were asked to turn down the volume on the television, when telephones had cords, and when porn slipped under mattresses. Oh yes, and when the young people were mowing lawns, getting bored and getting into mischief in the summer.

The film begins with a surreal scene, which sets the tone for this slow, perfectly offbeat animated film, with angular characters, like Beavis and Butt-Head, and a big Quebecois accent as a bonus.

Some will recognize the voices of Simon Lacroix, Noémie O’Farrell, Sophie Desmarais, Fabien Cloutier, Marc Beaupré and several others.

A family surrounds an old lady at the hospital. We guess she is dying. Everyone is in meditation mode. Adam arrives, limp side with dangling arms (and breasts), eyes wide, looking eternally lost. Dramatic twist: the lady stands up from her deathbed, and says, in a gravelly voice from beyond the grave: “I always thought you had a long trunk! »

Should we applaud the resurrected old woman, or shudder at her words of nameless malice? Doubt grips the viewer throughout, while this “long trunk” lengthens, and the discomforts multiply. While, above all, we wait for our Adam to pull himself together, and finally put his fist on the table (or elsewhere).

IMAGE PROVIDED BY FUNFILMS DISTRIBUTION

scene ofAdam is slowly changing

All the clichés of teenage comedies are there: the end of school, the pimply best friend, the first summer job, without forgetting the party watered and the final scene, this announced fiasco. Without forgetting impossible love, and this gang of young people cool that we love to hate so much. The humor here comes less from the dialogues than from the extremely absurd situations, as improbable as a cat with no legs thrown into a swimming pool.

Special mention to the music (by Joël Vaudreuil), sometimes distressing, a nod to John Carpenter (Halloween, The Thingetc.).

If the wickedness of some is matched only by the weakness of others, this film, as infuriating as it is delectable, despite its length, can only end badly, and we know it. We didn’t expect so much, and it’s as enjoyable as it is unsettling.

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Adam is slowly changing

Animation

Adam is slowly changing

Joel Vaudreuil

With the voices of Simon Lacroix, Noémie O’Farrell, Sophie Desmarais, Marc Beaupré and Isabelle Brouillette

1:36 a.m.
Indoors

8/10


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