L'État de grâce (1986) Directed by Jacques Rouffio
Comedy / Drama / Romance
Film Review
Magnetic performances from Nicole Garcia and Sami Frey salvage an
otherwise lacklustre romantic comedy which is somewhat marred by plot
contrivance and poor character development. Garcia was something
of a high-class sex symbol in France when this film was made and her
explicit love scenes with Frey are sensual without being
gratuitous. As ever, Jacques Rouffio's direction is more
workmanlike than inspired, although he cannot prevent the supporting
artistes - notably Pierre Arditi and Philippe Léotard - from
looking like spare limbs. The screenwriters' attempts to link the
central love story up with contemporary French politics (the industrial
strife of the early 1980s) appear heavy handed and merely distract us
from what the film should be about, which is Garcia's and Frey's
personal quandary over their seemingly ill-matched love affair.
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Film Synopsis
France, 1981. Antoine Lombard is the secretary of state for
Universities in the newly elected social government. During a
hostile meeting with the employers' union, he meets Florence
Vannier-Buchet, a hard-headed businesswoman who owns one of the
country's largest sportswear companies. Their politics may be
diametrically opposed, but Antoine and Florence are drawn to one
another by an intense mutual attraction, and they are soon perusing a
passionate love affair. When he begins to suspect that his wife
is cheating on him, Florence's husband, a prominent banker, insists
that they get divorced. Florence refuses. Despite her love
for Antoine, she cannot bring herself to give up the wealth and
prestige that she currently enjoys, or so she thinks...
Cast:Nicole Garcia (Florence Vannier-Buchet),
Sami Frey (Antoine Lombard),
Pierre Arditi (Jean-Marc Vannier-Buchet),
Dominique Labourier (Jeanne Lombard),
Jean Rougerie (Edmond Lombard),
Yvette Etiévant (Madeleine Lombard),
Catherine Hiegel (Sylvie),
Yves Pignot (Eric Buppon),
Marc Berman (Weber),
Philippe Léotard (Pierre-Julien),
Emmanuel Legrand (Un militant),
Cécile Mazan (Nathalie),
André Thorent (Florian),
Jean-Eric Grandgérard (Claude, le chauffeur),
José Montés (L'huissier du ministère),
Hugues Nonn (Le directeur de l'usine),
Olivier Pierre,
Carlo Brandt,
Umban U'kset,
Geoffrey Bateman
Country: France
Language: French
Support: Color
Runtime: 85 min
Continental Films, quality cinema under the Nazi Occupation
At the time of the Nazi Occupation of France during WWII, the German-run company Continental produced some of the finest films made in France in the 1940s.
Science-fiction came into its own in B-movies of the 1950s, but it remains a respected and popular genre, bursting into the mainstream in the late 1970s.