Film Review
After two of his strangest films,
La Classe de neige (1998)
and
La Chambre des magiciennes (2000),
director Claude Miller returns to more mundane territory with this intense
portrayal of a fragile mother-daughter relationship. This part of the film is by
far the most interesting and believable, thanks largely to first-rate acting performances
from Sandrine Kiberlain and Nicole Garcia who respectively play the love-starved daughter
Betty and the guilt-stricken by mentally unbalanced mother Margot.
What mars the film is the way in which the narrative is fragmented into a number of weakly
coupled story strands which ultimately come together in a somewhat unconvincing pulp-fiction
style ending. The film is heavily unbalanced, with just too many secondary
characters vying for our attention, with not one of them being as remotely interesting
as Betty or her mother. In a more conventional thriller, this would not have been
a problem. The fault is that, with the film's shockingly effective beginning, Miller
deliberately set out to make Betty and her mother the central focus of the film - to the
extent that all other subplots are almost entirely superfluous.
Another problem with the film, which probably stems from its unsatisfying narrative structure,
is that it unsure whether it is a thriller or a drama. Towards the end, the plot
relies so heavily on coincidence that it comes dangerously close to farce (particularly
the sub-plot with the hopeless crook Alex, which is presumably intended purely for comic
relief).
Despite its obvious narrative weaknesses,
Betty Fisher et autres histoires is an
entertaining and generally likeable film. Miller's cinematic approach has
certainly changed in recent years, and his mastery of the digital hand-held camera is
partly responsible for the film's unusual visual feel. The slightly shaky camerawork
serves to emphasise the emotional turbulence between Betty and her mother, although even
this is perhaps taken too far in some places.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Miller film:
La Petite Lili (2003)
Film Synopsis
After making her name as a writer in the United States, Betty Fisher returns
to France with her four-year-old son Joseph, leaving her partner Édouard
in New York. She moves into a house in a respectable Parisian suburb
and invites her mother, Margot, to come and live with her. Betty's
strained relationship with her mother is not helped by the fact that the
latter suffers from porphyria, a condition that causes her to behave irrationally.
Joseph is rushed to hospital after falling from a window but he dies not
long after from his injuries. Concerned by her daughter's hysterical
reaction to this news, Margot presents her with another little boy, pretending
it to be the grandson of a friend of hers who asked her to look after the
child for a while. In truth, the boy is a stranger, José, that
Margot kidnapped without knowing she was doing anything wrong. The
boy's mother, a bartender named Carole, is thrown into a panic by his disappearance
and a press campaign is soon in full swing to find the missing child.
When Margot goes away, Betty finds herself unable to return José to
his mother and a delicate bond develops between the grieving mother and the
kidnapped infant. Then Édouard appears from out of the blue.
When he learns that the boy in Betty's care has been abducted he threatens
his wife with blackmail. Meanwhile, Carole's present partner François
suspects his rival Alex may be the one who kidnapped José and makes
up his mind to kill him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.