Film Review
There are few forces in nature more powerful and more tenacious than
the mother instinct, and director Safy Nebbou uses this as the
basis for this slick, masterfully composed psychological thriller.
The almost primal confrontation between two women who appear equally certain of their
maternity of a little girl provides the motor for one of the darkest
and creepiest French thrillers in recent years, a film that owes
a great deal to Hitchcock (in both its design and its central theme
of transference) and which is far more chilling than any of
the slasher movies which have recently been inflicted on French cinema audiences.
This is Safy Nebbou's second feature, following his generally well-received
debut film
Le Cou de la giraffe (2004),
and already he looks like a force to be reckoned with.
Nebbou's stylish mise-en-scène, coupled with some highly
imaginative camerawork and some razor-sharp editing, gives
L'Empreinte an unsettlingly
claustrophobic feel of a nightmare. Dreams and reality become
indistinguishable as one woman's desire to resurrect her dead daughter
turns into a destructive obsession. The overall effect is perhaps
a little marred by the cop-out denouement, which somehow feels like the
wrong ending to the film, even though it is purportedly what happened
in the true story on which the film is based.
Real life has much to commend it but it isn't necessarily the best screenwriter.
What makes
L'Empreinte a
particularly compelling film are the performances from its two lead
actresses, Catherine Frot and Sandrine Bonnaire, an inspired pairing which
gives the film both a visceral intensity and blistering poignancy.
Frot is still better known for her
comedy work, in such films as
Le Dîner de cons (1998),
7
ans de mariage (2003) and
Mon petit doigt m'a dit (2005),
but recently she has begun to distinguish herself with her more serious
dramatic roles. Here, as a woman who becomes consumed with the
idea that she is the mother of another woman's daughter,
Frot turns in her most harrowingly convincing performance to date.
Sandrine Bonnaire is no less impressive and her scenes with Frot are electrifying
in their intensity. We are reminded of Bonnaire's previous
collaboration with Isabelle Huppert in Claude Chabrol's
La Cérèmonie (1995),
which features a similarly unsettling malignant incursion into
a cosy bourgeois household. Safy Nebbou's writing and direction
are certainly very commendable but what ultimately sells this film
and makes it a compulsive viewing experience are the absolutely gripping
performances from two of French cinema's finest actresses.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After her husband left her, Elsa Valentin now leads a settled life in a pleasant
suburb of Paris with her infant son, Thomas. She has managed to put
behind her the one great tragedy of her life, the loss of her daughter six
years ago. The phantoms of the past suddenly return to Elsa one day
when she comes to collect her son from a children's birthday party.
For some reason, one girl she notices at the party, Lola, appears familiar
to her. From that moment, the young woman becomes convinced that the
girl is her own daughter and is increasingly obsessed with meeting her.
Taking advantage of the fact that her son has befriended Lola's brother,
Elsa manages to inveigle her way into the little girl's household.
She strikes up a friendship with the girl's mother, Claire Vigneaux, but
gradually the latter becomes concerned by the stranger's evident interest
in her daughter. Elsa's behaviour appears ever more worrying as she
becomes more insistent on seeing Lola, whom she is now certain is her lost
child. Claire soon has reason to believe that she is being harassed
by a maniac who intends to bring nothing but harm to her family...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.