So, you have successfully romanced Julie Delpy. Well done, since she’s funny and beautiful and smart and, in the world of Lolo, also a successful fashion design person of some kind. You get her back to her apartment, plop down on the bed, and accidentally break the rib of her adult son, who emerges from the sheets in bright orange underwear and proceeds to systematically ruin your life. What do you do, hotshot? What do you do?
If you are a rational, sane person you get the hell out of there as fast as you can and don’t look back except with an occasional, fleeting wist. But if you are Jean-René (Dany Poon), you soldier on with a happy smile and assume the best in everybody and eventually suffer all the suffering as a result. Lolo (Vincent Lacoste) puts itching powder in Jean-René’s clothing and convinces his mum that all her new boyfriend’s scratching is from an STI. Lolo spikes Jean-René’s drink at a fancy, fancy work party. Lolo doesn’t like it when other men distract his mom from what really matters: Lolo.
And Lolo, the film, is just as unbalanced as Lolo, the character. Delpy co-wrote and directed this acidic farce, and she keeps the tone consistently arch. It is obvious that Lolo is supposed to be very, very funny. But the twisted undertone of the plot is quite mean-spirited, since we are expected to laugh for most of the running time at a kind, sweet human being who is systematically destroyed and ruined by an arch villain. Whether that’s funny is a matter of some debate.

Related: TIFF 2015 Interview | Julie Delpy on ‘Lolo’ and Bad Seeds
Put it this way: Lolo plays a little like a Bugs Bunny cartoon, but if Elmer Fudd never hunted at all and just stayed at home and worked for charities all day. He’s a helpless victim with noble intentions who still has to fend off the superhuman attacks of an animal who feels righteous in their anger, even though they were never slighted in the first place. The performances may be solid and the timing may be spot-on, but you will be forgiven for thinking that the whole comedic foundation is a bit dodgy to begin with.
But if you can get off on this form of humiliation comedy – and let’s face it, a lot of us can – then Lolo should amuse you. Certainly Delpy is a deft filmmaker, and along with her co-writer Eugénie Grandval she has crafted some very interesting characters who spout the kind of funny, believable dialogue that middle-aged adults rarely get to say in American movies anymore. Lolo is not a bad movie, it’s just a perplexing one. I’m not sure if the most rational response to Lolo is amusement or horror, but I do enjoy asking the question.
Images via Mars Distribution
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.
The Best of TIFF 2015 | Exclusive Reviews, Interviews and Videos
The Best of TIFF 2015: Exclusive Reviews, Interviews and Videos
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'The Martian' Sciences All The Science
Matt Damon stars in an outer space thriller by nerds, for nerds. The rest of us can enjoy it too.
Image via 20th Century Fox
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Brian Helgeland on ‘Legend’ and ‘The Wild Bunch’
The Oscar-winning filmmaker reveals which Tom Hardy was hardest to work within a film that stars two of them.
Image via Universal Pictures
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'High-Rise' is an Impressive Erection
An insulated community gradually collapses into anarchy and horror in Ben Wheatley’s slimy J.G. Ballard adaptation.
Image via Recorded Picture Company
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Denis Villeneuve on 'Sicario' and 'Blade Runner 2'
The filmmaker promises to 'take care of' the mystery of whether Deckard is a replicant or a human in his next film, the long-awaited follow-up to Blade Runner.
Image via CraveOnline
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'The Boy and the Beast' is Best of the Fest
Mamoru Hosoda’s unique and brilliant animated fantasy could very well fill a hole in your soul.
Image via Mongrel Media
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Chiwetel Ejiofor on ‘The Martian’
He can about playing a super nerd, but he cannot talk about playing a supervillain (yet).
Image via CraveOnline
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Tom Hardy is Kray-Kray in 'Legend'
Tom Hardy plays identical twin organized crime bosses, but only one of them well, in Brian Helgeland’s uneven biopic.
Image via Universal Pictures
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'The Danish Girl' Flakes at the End
Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander give soaring performances, but this Oscar contender lands with an unexpected thud.
Image via Focus Features
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'Mustang' Isn't Just Turkey's 'Virgin Suicides'
A promising new filmmaker explores the repressions five sisters undergo when they’re accused of sexual indecency.
Images via Cohen Media Group
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Drew Goddard on 'The Martian' and 'Sinister Six'
"It was the epic Spider-Man movie of my dreams," says the acclaimed writer/director.
Image via CraveOnline
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'Body' Makes You Laugh Without Knowing Why
Corporeality haunts three characters in this masterful Silver Bear winner from director Małgorzata Szumowska.
Image via Nowhere
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'Green Room' Has Strong Fear on Tap
Jeremy Saulnier's neo-Nazi thriller is a worthy follow-up to Blue Ruin.
Image via A24
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Superb Satire in 'Chevalier'
The Greek New Wave demands to be viewed with this comedy about hyper-competitiveness turning men into horse's asses.
Image via Faliro House Productions
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'Sicario' Borders on Greatness
From the director of Prisoners comes a gripping episode of narcs and violations.
Image via Lionsgate