Film Review
An engaging, well-measured performance from Patrick Chesnais (one of
the finest actors working in France today) brings an exceptional degree
of poignancy and humanity to this beguiling low-key drama. The
film's subject may be a familiar one - a solitary older man falling for
a fragile younger woman - but Stéphane Brizé's subtle
direction and Chesnais's heartrending portrayal make it devastatingly
effective. There are echoes of other great directors here -
Rohmer, Bergman, Truffaut - in the way that a simple story is told with
great sensitivity and meaning.
Je ne suis pas là pour
être aimé is only Brizé's second full-length
film, his first being the highly entertaining
Le Bleu des villes
(1999). What both films have in common is their striking
blend of realism and poetic charm. The characters and the world
they inhabit are portrayed with an almost documentary-style
authenticity, and yet the feelings and aspirations of these same
characters are shown, just as convincingly, with immense poetry, irony
and some humour. Stéphane Brizé's work should be
better known and anyone who sees
Je
ne suis pas là pour être aimé will
immediately recognise a filmmaker of immense talent and
sincerity.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Stéphane Brizé film:
Entre adultes (2007)
Film Synopsis
After his divorce, Jean-Claude Delsart finds he has lost his zest for living.
Now in his fifties, increasingly estranged from his son Jean-Yves, he finds
his work as a bailiff dishearteningly dull and has no enthusiasm for starting
new relationships. He lives alone, miserable and tired with life.
As a result, his health is beginning to suffer. He consults his doctor,
who diagnoses he is suffering from stress and suggests he takes up a new
hobby to help broaden his horizons. This is how Jean-Claude ends up
enrolling in a dance class, something he would never have thought of doing
a year ago. The therapy seems to work.
Within a short time, Jean-Claude finds himself a new friend in Françoise,
a good-looking woman who is younger than him by twenty years. She is
presently in a relationship with another man, an aspiring writer named Thierry,
but he seems to be more interested in the book he is working on than her.
The one thing that Jean-Claude and Françoise have in common is that
neither of them wants to start a new love affair, but as they get to know
one another better they discover an inexplicable mutual attraction.
Can it be that the lonely 50-year-old is falling in love again, or is he
just heading for another terrible disappointment...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.