Film Review
Having given us some breathtakingly stylish and original pieces of cinema in recent years,
François Ozon has taken most people by surprise with this latest offering: a seemingly
anodyne portrayal of a couple falling in and out of love, told in reverse. Inspired
by Ingmar Bergman's
Scenes
from a Marriage , the film relates five key events in the turbulent relationship
of an obviously ill-matched couple, offering a deeply cynical view of romantic love which
is characteristically Ozon-esque.
Once again, the director can hardly be faulted on his technique - the film is beautifully
composed, using close-ups to devastating effect to drive home the full psychological impact
of a disintegrating love affair. Ozon's lead actors, Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
and Stéphane Freiss, convey real emotion in their finely tuned performances which
elevate a pretty mediocre script to the level, almost, of a classic piece of drama.
However, the film is not without its faults. Its reversed five-part composition
emphasises weaknesses both in the characterisation and the structure of the film.
Near the end of the film, it is hard to imagine how Gilles and Marion could ever have
got it together, and so their meeting has a more than a touch of implausibility.
However, the rot sets in way before then. After a promising first couple of segments,
the film throws up a number of unresolved questions about the nature of the relationship.
Why is Gilles so reluctant to attend the birth of his child? Why does Marion allow
an unknown man to seduce her on her wedding night? It's rather like a series of
loud bangs going off in the background, without any real justification - a crude and ineffective
way of bringing dramatic tension into the narrative. A more subtle approach would
have been far more effective.
Whilst it may not be Ozon's best work to date, there
are some things which do mark
5x2 out as significant.
A fair criticism of Ozon's cinema is that there tends to be plenty of style but a lack
of genuine human emotion. For all its faults,
5x2
does convey a deeper sense of compassion, humanity and emotional torment
than most, if not all, of Ozon's earlier films. In that sense, it is a more mature
and thoughtful work than what has gone before, and gives a good indication that François
Ozon's greatest films are yet to come.
© James Travers 2006
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Next François Ozon film:
Le Temps qui reste (2005)
Film Synopsis
Marion and Gilles have been together for many years but now they have arrived
at the mutual decision to end their marriage. Once their divorce has
been finalised, they meet up for one last time in a hotel bedroom.
It is their last chance to relive the happier times in their relationship
before they go their separate ways. Perhaps they knew their separation
was inevitable at the party when Gilles confessed to being unfaithful to
his wife. Or maybe the cracks in the marriage were already starting
to show on the day that Gilles failed to turn up at the hospital when Marion
was about to give birth to their son. As they cast their minds back
they wonder whether they were ever really in love or whether they have been
living a lie all these years...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.