Film Review
For her first feature, budding director Idit Cebula chose a subject
dear to her heart, how women with a busy family and professional life
face up to the inescapable trauma of midlife crisis. Although the
subject will doubtless be a familiar one to most French film
aficionados, Cebula gives her film the personal touch by drawing on her
own experiences and by injecting a healthy dose of off-beat humour,
which includes a few bizarre excursions into the surreal.
Cebula, herself an established actress, puts in a fleeting appearance
as a successful writer. What the film lacks in depth it
just about makes up for in charm, although some obvious flaws in the
screenplay will have you grating your teeth in frustration (Cebula will
have us believe that buying a laptop computer is as shockingly eventful
as coming out to your children or admitting to being a rabid
baby-eating Satanist). What saves the film and prevents it
from being an inconsequential vanity project are the contributions from
the two principal actors, Emmanuelle Devos (
Sur mes lèvres)
and Gérard Darmon (
Le Coeur des hommes),
whose on-screen rapport breathes life into the still-born scenario and
brings an authenticity and depth which is lacking elsewhere.
This is Devos's third collaboration with Cebula - she previously
appeared in the director's two short films
À table (1998) and
Varsovie Paris (2002). Over
the last two decades, Devos and Darmon have emerged as two of France's most versatile
screen actors, both embracing a wide variety of roles,
ranging from lightweight comedy to intensely serious drama.
Despite the obvious difference in their ages, Devos and Darmon actually
look as though they are a couple in this film, that they really have
been together twenty years. Both actors deliver sensitive and
humane performances that anyone who has experienced midlife crisis will
recognise as informed and genuine. Darmon's attempts to cope with
Devos's increasingly irrational behaviour as menopausal angst takes
hold of her have a tragic hopelessness and you feel for both characters
as their world is upended by a nasty case of hormonal
imbalance.
Deux vies...
plus une is not a particularly profound film, and occasionally
it is downright silly, but on the strength of the Devos and Darmon's
performances it has little difficulty holding our attention and offers
an honest and poignant reflection on that irksome forty-year itch.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Eliane Weiss, a primary school teacher, finds herself increasingly put
upon by the demands of her job, her husband, her daughter and her
overly possessive mother. She ought to be happy but, as she
approaches her fortieth birthday, she feels that something is missing
in her life. One day, she meets a writer, Jeanne Sfez, who
encourages her to realise her life-long dream. On impulse,
Eliane buys a laptop computer and begins to compose her first novel from
jottings she has made in numerous notebooks over the past decade.
She begins to lose heart when her manuscript is rejected by several
publishing houses. But then she meets a publisher who appears
to be interested in her work - or is he more interested in her...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.