Film Review
"Quand on prend des risques, on peut perdre. Quand on n'en prend
pas, on perd toujours." So says the heroine of
Joueuse when asked why chess means
so much to her, and the epigram might well apply to the film
itself. Risk is certainly the
mot
juste when it comes to making a film which revolves around the
game of chess. Some notable films of this genre spring to mind -
Richard Dembo's
La Diagonale du fou (1984) and
Satyajit Ray's
The Chess Players (1977) - but
these are rarities, and for a good reason. What right-minded
producer would choose to throw away his grandchildren's hard-earned
inheritance on a film centred on a game that is considered the sole
reserve of boy scouts, highbrow intellectuals and Carol
Vorderman?
Writer-director Caroline Bottaro evidently was not daunted by the
prospect of trying to sell a chess-based drama to a cinema-going public
whose acquaintance with chess was pretty well limited to the Tim Rice
musical. Having scripted several films for director Jean-Pierre
Améris - including the bittersweet romantic drama
C'est
la vie (2001) - Bottaro bravely chose to make her directing
debut by adapting Bertina Heinrichs' novel
La Joueuse d'Echecs.
Although, predictably, Bottaro had some difficulty finding a producer,
she won through in the end (thanks to the support of her long-term
agent Dominique Besnehard) and delivers a distinctive but compelling
drama in which chess is both an explicit plot driver and a metaphor for
the romantic drama that ensues. The story is a simple one,
showing how a passion can transform a life, for better or for worse,
but is handled so delicately and with such understanding of the
subtleties of human psychology that it can hardly fail to move an
audience.
Just as the queen is the most powerful piece on the board, so Sandrine
Bonnaire is the most powerful element of this film, perfectly cast as
the ordinary middleaged hotel cleaner who discovers a new lease of life
through the game of chess. Bonnaire has a particular talent for
playing complex characters as ordinary down-to-Earth women, most
notably in her portrayal of Joan of Arc in Jacques Rivette's celebrated
Jeanne d'Arc
diptych. Here she gives an exceptional performance,
skilfully portraying someone who experiences a profound spiritual
renewal through her love of chess and a concurrent liaison with a
reclusive older man, played just as sensitively by the well-known
American actor Kevin Kline.
Joueuse is an intensely moving,
imaginatively crafted piece of cinema which uses the chess motif
intelligently and unpretentiously as a potent allegory for life.
Beautifully shot on the island of Corsica, this is an authentic,
life-affirming film that will doubtless encourage couples to dig out
their chess sets and rediscover the joys of the Sicilian Defence.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Hélène is a woman in her forties who leads a contented but
routine life in a small Corsican village. Happily married to Ange,
she has a 15-year-old daughter, Lisa and works as a hotel chambermaid.
Hélène is busy tidying one of the hotel rooms when she notices
an American couple playing a game of chess on the patio. She has never
had any interest in the game before but suddenly she acquires a strange fascination
for it. There is something mystical about the pieces and the way they
move about the board, enacting a war that exists only in the minds of the
players. The middle-aged woman decides at once that she must learn
how to play the game.
Fortunately, there is a man on the island, Monsieur Kröger, who is more
than willing to mentor her. He is something of an expert in chess and
under his patient tutelage Hélène soon becomes a very competent
player. With practice and dedication, her skill at the game eventually
surpasses that of her teacher and she acquires a new lease of life.
Naturally, Hélène's intellectual awakening and newly acquired
sense of empowerment do not go unnoticed by her family and friends, who come
to regard her as a completely altered woman. As Hélène's
devotion to her chess playing grows, her relationship with her husband and
daughter come under increasing strain. Then Kröger persuades her
to take part in a chess tournament...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.