Film Review
Il y a longtemps que je t'aime
marks a promising directorial debut for Philippe Claudel, a successful
novelist whose best-known work
Les
Âmes grises was adapted for cinema in 2005 (with Claudel
providing the screenplay). Claudel's approach is refreshingly
restrained and unfussy, avoiding the stylistic flourishes (excessive
camera motion, frenetic editing, etc.) which seem to have become
de rigueur, even for a naturalistic
character-based drama such as this. The lack of stylisation
and visual gimmickery is a good thing for this kind of film, since it
gives the actors more of an opportunity to define and project their
characters, making the drama more intimate and the emotions we feel far
more real.
Claudel's pared down approach to storytelling is appealing but it has
its limitations. Flaws in the writing and the performances are
far more noticeable when we do not have the modern cinematic devices to
distract us, and this is most apparent towards the end of the
film. The film is most effective in its first half, where the
brittle relationship between the two sisters, Juliette and Léa,
is developed and the past traumas that have divided them for so long
are gradually unravelled. Things take an abrupt turn for the
worse at the end of the film when it is revealed that Juliette is not
really culpable of her crimes but is merely the victim of an obsessive
guilt complex. Many would consider this a cop out too far.
It's a shame that such a thoughtful and intelligent drama should end in
the kind of plot contrivance that would be embarrassing even in a
television soap opera. The final plot twist may be infuriating to
watch but, in all honesty, it does not greatly diminish the film's
impact or the sincerity with which it is crafted. Composed with a
genuine understanding of the fragility of human relationships,
Il y a longtemps que je t'aime
manages to be a compelling and moving study of redemption and rebirth
- its effect greatly heightened by a performance from Kristin Scott
Thomas that is as haunting as it is poignant.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
For 15 years, Juliette has had nothing to do with her family and has
lived apart, a solitary and tortured existence. On impulse, she
finally decides to renew her acquaintance with her sister, Léa,
who has made a successful career for herself and has started a
family. The two women find it hard to communicate at first.
Both are burdened with a secret past which one has all but forgotten
but which the other can never escape from...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.