I was reluctant to go for the ride. I think movies about great horses cannot make great movies, even if they are very well done they only cater for a limited public: kids if it's mostly a fable, or connoisseurs if it's more of a true story.
Then I am no fan of Guillaume Canet. The lack of depth in his turf plus the fact that he envisioned the Jappeloup story as 'Rocky meets jumpers' really did not appeal to me. And even if I was crazy about jumping I would have had these many reservations.
Now Jappeloup has been cleverly crafted around the choices that rider Pierre Durand had to face, with the central paternal figure played to perfection by Daniel Auteuil. This is enough to tell an emotional story that peaks with every jumping show.
The seminal choice for Durand to leave his lawyer job to live his passion to the full is well timed, but emotion really lies with the father's simple and heartfelt lines. The father then comes on schedule to ease the stress while his son only appears as bland, more obstinate than really passionate about riding, let alone about his horse.
The groom character created as a proxy for the horse-rider relationship is not really interesting. It shaves a narrative challenge off the main character's shoulders, only making him look vain and passive before others - the groom (Lou de Laâge),his father, his wife (Marina Hands) - steer him in the right direction.
In the end, the mere succession of key jumping events starts to be too much, all the more so as the father is no longer there. And maybe the movie lacks Daniel Auteuil to deliver the final word, because in the end there is no sense of a lesson learnt. The journey was emotionally charged but the minute after we arrived it's all gone.
Plot summary
A true sports story that utterly defies the odds, Duguay's film captures the wild ups and downs of the Olympics-bound career of legendary equine star Jappeloup and his troubled rider, locked in a tense relationship with his horseman father and forever uncertain of his own skills as an equestrian.
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An emotional journey, only a bit too long
The Long and Winding Road to the Olympics !
Jappeloup is a beautifully shot film ostensibly about the titular horse, who with Pierre Durand aboard, won gold for France at the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games in the show - jumping event. Directed by Christian Duguay and co-scripted by lead, Guillaume Canet (himself surprisingly, a very experienced junior equestrian),playing Durand, it's really one of those films probably best appreciated by horsey people. It charts the extremely episodic rise of the pair, including a near disastrous stint at the 1984 Los Angles Olympics, before the grand finale at Seoul.
Unfortunately Jappeloup is mostly uninterested in the horse that it's titled after. It never goes any way to offering an explanation as to why Jappeloup himself, is recognised as a national hero in France, or even regarded internationally as one of the very great show-jumping equines. There's a post credits cursory reference to the fact that Jappeloup's competition retirement ceremony was held at the Eiffel Tower in Paris. But viewers of this extremely long biopic, are completely left in the dark, as to what really made the horse special, apart from a singular reference that he was small, but jumped well.
Instead we get a way too-detailed, decade long look at the life of Durand and his family members, with an overly special emphasis (Why, I have no idea.) placed on his father Serge, played very agreeably by Daniel Auteuil. Trials and tribulations are met and slowly overcome. Births, deaths, marriages and uneasiness about chosen vocations are slowly explored, before a sudden dramatic near disaster involving a fiery float near a busy freeway, leads us to an emotional, but ironically almost too brisk climax.
Boasting exceedingly strong production values, a strong cast and convincing locations, Jappeloup nevertheless, as a story, drags its reins. At 130 minutes long, it is filled with too many unnecessary situation human dramas and barely scratches the surface of its supposedly featured subject. It is unable to muster much excitement, or even make a good case for the horse's significance. Superficially to this layman, it appears to stick relatively closely to the key facts. But the fact that the real life Pierre Durand sued the film's producers, doesn't add much lustre to this much too, run of the mill story.
The most touching movie I've ever seen!
I can watch Jappeloup seven times in one day because I love it so much! Jappeloup is a true story about Jappeloup, a very little jumping horse. The film tells his whole story and it's not boring but very interesting. It's a drama but it's sometimes comedic and there are a lot of happy moments.
The director of Jappeloup is Christian Duguay, I don't know him but he has made a fabulous job and the film is very realistic. The lead roles are Guillaume Canet, my favorite actor, who plays Pierre Durand, Jappeloup's rider, and Marina Hands, a superb actress, who plays Pierre Durand's wife. Lou De Laâge plays Jappeloup's groom and I love this actress because she is very emotional and she plays very well! Jappeloup's life began in 1980, but the movie was released in 2013 in France. There aren't special effects because it's a true story but the music is awesome, the composer is Clinton Shorter and he makes a fantastic job creating an affecting music.
This movie won 1 César in 2014 and 1 "Prix Lumière" in 2014. To me, there aren't negative points and you must see it if you are a horse rider.
When it was released I wasn't convinced I wanted to see it but now I can watch it my whole life without being bored. It's the most moving film I have ever seen because you can cry about it and one second after you can be very happy and have a laugh. My favorite moment is when Jappeloup and his horse rider Pierre Durand won the Olympic Games in 1988. You must watch it! You'll have a better day! E.A