Film Review
With
Clean, an intensely poignant, remarkably astute account of
a woman struggling to repair a life that has been all but trashed by drugs and personal
tragedy, Olivier Assayas continues to dazzle as one of France's foremost
auteur filmamkers. It's a surprisingly understated film, noticeably
more introspective and restrained than much of Assayas's earlier work,
which include the brutally realist
L'Eau froide (1994)
and flamboyant period drama
Les Destinées sentimentales (2000).
The narrative approach and mise-en-scène are pretty conventional,
showing little of the stylistic quirks that we have
come to expect of this idiosyncratic director, who reveals himself
mostly through a customary sense of detachment. By reining in
his artistic excesses, Assayas ensures that the focus stays well and
truly on his magnificent lead actress Maggie Cheung, his former wife and
the star of his earlier film
Irma Vep. Everything the film shows us
is from Cheung's perspective, and that gives it an incredible sense
of intimacy and immediacy.
The film owes its impact almost entirely to Cheung's spellbinding performance (probably
her best to date), through which we gain a real sense of the tremendous ordeal her
character has to go through in order to reconnect with herself and the world
around her. The sequences near the end of the
film where Emily attempts a faltering reconciliation with her young son is
not just true to life, it has a peculiar kind of poetry that really does
touch the soul.
Clean is a beautiful film which
deals wisely and imaginatively with some familiar themes (notably the
power of love to heal the wounds of the past), and whilst some
of Assayas's other films can be intimidating this one is definitely
one that can speak to anyone - anyone in the world. It tells a
simple story in a simple way, and is all the more powerful for doing so.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Olivier Assayas film:
L'Heure d'été (2008)
Film Synopsis
Emily Wang and Lee Hauser have been in a relationship for many years. He
is a 40-something rock singer who is past his prime; she is his promoter,
and is finding it increasingly difficult to find him work. They have
managed to get through the highs and lows of their professional and private
lives with the help of hard drugs, principally heroin. Things finally
come to a head during a tour of Canada. The couple fall out and Lee
ends up by taking a fatal overdose. His partner finds herself spending
the next six months in jail. On her release from prison, Emily heads
back to Paris to pick up where she left off with her friends Elena and Irène.
Emily is determined to kick the drugs habit so that she can one day take
back custody of her son Jay, who is presently in the care of Lee's parents.
She has a long way to go before she is 'clean' and fit enough to reassume
the responsibilities of motherhood, but she is resolved not to be beaten...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.