Film Review
For her debut feature, director Emmanuelle Millet bravely examines one
of the more controversial and less talked about areas of maternity,
that of the woman who is incapable of assuming the responsibility of
motherhood and is impelled to give up her child for adoption as soon as
it is born. It is an ambitious undertaking for a first film and
whilst its failings, on both the writing and directing fronts, are hard
to miss,
La Brindille offers
a sensitive and authentic account of a young woman (barely out of
adolescence) who finds herself in this predicament. It is all too
easy to label such women as egoistical, thoughtless, even
irresponsible, but Millet's modest film forces us to revise our
prejudices and look more sympathetically on those who would rather give
up their offspring than take on the burden of motherhood at too early
an age.
The woman in question is played with conviction and surprising maturity
by Christa Theret, the promising young talent revealed in Lisa
Azuelos's hit comedy
LOL
(2009) and whose uncanny resemblance to Botticelli's Venus
makes her an inspired casting choice. Theret's charismatic
presence allows Millet
to construct the most intimate and truthful portrayal of
a young woman who is visibly torn between two conflicting desires, her
primal maternal instincts and the need to enjoy life to the full,
whilst she still can. Millet makes it easier for us to sympathise
with Theret's character by making it clear that she is unaware of her
pregnancy until it is too late for her to have a legal abortion.
When she first learns she is pregnant, Sarah is unable to accept the
fact and she carries on living her precarious, carefree existence in
almost total denial of the fact. Our instinctive disapproval of
the character is assuaged by her childlike innocence; her unwanted
pregnancy is not a blessing, but an unfortunate mishap, which she copes
with as best she can. This is, after all, real life, not a
fairytale romance.
Theret's solid central performance is complemented by the understated
contributions from an impressive supporting ensemble that includes
Johan Libéreau, Anne Le Ny and Albert Dupontel, to which we must
add another talented newcomer Nina Meurisse (previously revealed in
Frédéric Mermoud's 2010 film
Complices).
Theret's scenes with Libéreau and Le Ny are particularly
absorbing and provide most of the substance for a film which has a
tendency to drift in and out of arty abstraction for much of its
time. In between the time-filling longueurs, where you can't help
feeling the director has knocked off early and left the camera running
unattended, there are some inspired, intensely moving moments.
Unlikely as it may seem, we do come to see things from the heroine's
perspective and accept that she has made the right choice, for both
herself and the child she in unable to accept as her own.
La Brindille may have its
shortcomings but it also has its virtues, not least of which is the
insight it sheds on a contentious issue, which it
does with the compassion and sobriety the subject merits.
© James Travers 2013
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Film Synopsis
Sarah is 19 and has high hopes of forging a successful career as an artist.
Presently, she has a trainee position at a museum in Marseille and couldn't
be happier. Then, one day, she falls ill and discovers, to her surprise.
that she is pregnant. Before she knows it, she has no job, no money,
no home, no future. She ends up debating with herself whether to keep
the child or not. Knowing that she has passed the deadline for a legal
abortion, Sarah accepts she has no choice but to go ahead with the birth,
but by now she has made up her mind to give the baby up for adoption straight
afterwards. She is too young to be a mother and having to bring up
a child at her age would prevent her from pursuing any kind of career.
As her pregnancy continues, Sarah feels increasingly conflicted and starts
to wonder if keeping the child isn't such a bad idea. In the end, she must
choose between becoming a single mother, with all the hardship that entails,
or continuing her free and easy life as an independent young woman.
It will be the toughest decision of her life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.