Two brothers and one dire diagnosis adds up to a charming tale

Two brothers and one dire diagnosis adds up to a charming tale

There’s no more surefire recipe for either comedy or drama than the odd couple: two characters from different worlds thrown together by fate. That’s the basis for new French movie My Brother’s Band, the story of two brothers adopted by separate families who have grown up unaware of each other’s existence.

Thibaut (Benjamin Lavernhe) is an internationally successful orchestra conductor who is diagnosed with leukemia and needs a bone marrow transplant. The search for a successful donor leads him to Jimmy (Pierre Lottin), who leads a much more modest life in a mining town in northern France, where he works in a cafeteria.

In his spare time, Jimmy plays trombone in a local brass band – and while music becomes a symbol of everything that divides him from his brother, it ultimately serves as the bridge between them.

Benjamin Lavernhe and Pierre Lottin are long-lost brothers who share a love of music in My Brother’s Band.

Benjamin Lavernhe and Pierre Lottin are long-lost brothers who share a love of music in My Brother’s Band.Credit: Thibault Grabherr

Writer-director Emmanuel Courcol, who looks like the gentler kind of school principal, is somewhere between these two characters (he started his career as a stage actor before moving into screenwriting, but didn’t direct his first feature until he was in his mid-fifties).

Talking to him, it’s clear he identifies more closely with Thibaut, especially in his preference for what he frankly calls “higher-level” classical music. It’s also clear there are parallels between life and art: Courcol wrote the role of Jimmy for Lottin, and the pair make an odd couple in their own right.

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The 36-year-old Lottin has been a star in France for more than a decade, but until recently has remained much less well-known in the English-speaking world. At home, he’s best-known for the Les Tuche film series, a variant on The Beverly Hillbillies about a working-class family who win the lottery (the latest instalment, God Save the Tuches, where the family visit the UK, was the most popular homegrown film in French cinemas this year).

Like everyone in the Tuche family, the Lottin character in these films is an outrageous stereotype, a closeted would-be rapper who wears his cap backwards and speaks in a strangled, high-pitched voice. The humour may be lost in translation, but then you could imagine French audiences feeling the same about, say, Fat Pizza.

Over the past few years Lottin has shown there’s more to him than just broad comedy. Recently, he had a supporting role in Francois Ozon’s highly-praised thriller When Fall Is Coming – and before My Brother’s Band, he and Courcol made another film together, the 2020 comedy-drama The Big Hit, about a production of Waiting For Godot staged in a prison.

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