Film Review
In what would prove to be his final film, Alain Corneau makes a welcome
return to the genre which first established him as a filmmaker in the
1970s, a taut psychological thriller with a distinct edge of film noir
stylisation. In many ways,
Crime
d'amour is Corneau's most interesting film in almost a decade,
combining a cynical exploration of the harsh corporate environment -
previously seen in the director's
Stupeur et tremblements (2003)
- with a sinister murder mystery, in the best tradition of the
classical French polar. Whilst the film can hardly be described
as an unqualified success (the narrative is painfully uneven and prone
to cliché whilst the film itself is over-stylised), it is,
overall, a compelling and enjoyable parting shot from one of France's
most highly thought of filmmakers.
The first half of the film is easily the best, offering a chilling
portrait of office politics which many spectators will find
disturbingly familiar. This concentrates on the increasingly
sadomasochistic relationship between the two female leads, played by
Kristin Scott Thomas and Ludivine Sagnier. Thomas is superlative
as the ruthless dominatrix businesswoman, ruling her little empire with
majestic self-assurance and effortless cunning, looking scarily like a
hybrid of Margaret Thatcher and Servalan from
Blake's Seven, with a hint of Snow
White's wicked stepmother thrown in for good measure. A
malignant man-eating spider at the heart of a corporate web, Thomas
ensnares her victims with relish, before munching them up as she might a finger buffet. Ludivine Sagnier can hardly hope to
compete with such a full blooded performance and is somewhat less
convincing as the seemingly innocent Lolita- turned-Machiavellian assassin.
Although Sagnier looks increasingly out of her depth as the film
progresses, her early scenes with Thomas provide a fascinating study in
psychological power play and convey some sense of the brutal inhumanity
that pervades today's corporate culture.
After an extremely promising beginning, the film soon starts to unravel
and by its midpoint the plot has strayed too far into the realm of the
implausible to be remotely convincing. Corneau's ham-fisted
attempt to patch over the weaknesses in the narrative by inundating us
with a surfeit of unnecessary stylisation merely makes things
worse. By this stage, Sagnier's excruciatingly unsubtle performance has become
pretty unbearable and the flashy stylistic embellishments (including
some pointless and intrusive flashbacks) merely reinforce the
impression that the film has run out of steam and ideas. The last
twenty minutes consist of little more than a mechanical attempt to maintain a
sense of mystery which isn't really there, and consequently are
something of an ordeal to get through.
Crime d'amour is by no means Alain
Corneau's worst film, but if only it had restricted itself to being a
portrait of corporate venality without resorting to murderous intrigue
and excessive stylisation it could easily have been one of his best.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Alain Corneau film:
Police Python 357 (1976)
Film Synopsis
Isabelle is an ambitious young executive who works in the Paris offices of
an important multinational company. Her boss, Christine, is even more
ambitious and is not beyond claiming Isabelle's work as her own to advance
her career. When Isabelle gets wind of this, she hits back, but in
doing so she makes herself a dangerous enemy. Christine blackmails
her lover Philippe into inflicting an emotional blow against Isabelle that
will make her a laughing stock in front of her colleagues. Isabelle
claims her revenge by stabbing her boss to death at her home and then planting
evidence that makes it apparent that she is the murderer. When the
police arrest her Isabelle is in a state of complete mental collapse and
confesses to the killing. But then, as she awaits her trial in prison,
Isabelle retracts her confession and demonstrates that all the evidence against
her is circumstantial, not safe enough to convict her. As she exculpates
herself from the crime, she diverts suspicion towards Philippe, the next
target of her vengeance...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.