Film Review
La Femme défendue is a familiar tale of marital infidelity à la française,
but told in the most unfamiliar way imaginable.
The entire drama is filmed literally
from the point of view of the central male character, with some ingenious camerawork
that convinces us we are seeing the world through his eyes. It is the ultimate
in subjective cinema - as near as damn it.
For the most part, the camera
is trained unblinkingly on the face of the lead actress, Isabelle Carré, as if
mesmerised by her beauty and transfixed by the romantic possibilities she offers. And
who can blame it - Carré is mouth-wateringly gorgeous.
It is certainly a radical departure from Philippe Harel's previous film, the
mainstream comedy
Les Randonneurs (1997),
which proved to be a surprising box office hit.
La Femme défendue
is probably not the first film to be shot from one person's point of view but
it presented immense challenges, to the director, his screenwriter Eric Assous and his camera crew.
The result is a curiously likeable film with an almost indecent sense of intimacy,
and once you have accustomed yourself to being stuck in Harel's head
for the duration it is incredibly compelling.
Harel was fortunate to have an actress as talented as Isabelle Carré at his disposal.
Given that Carré's is the only face we see on the screen for any length of time,
it's as well that she is such an expressive actress, capable of saying so much with the
subtlest of gestures and never for a moment losing our interest. As in
Zabou Breitman's
Se souvenir des belles choses (2001)
Carré is an object of fascination - we can see straight into her soul and
are mesmerised by what we see.
Harel, a very capable actor, plays the part of the male lead, but his face is glimpsed in only two very short sequences,
and on both occasions we perversely expect to see our own face, not Harel's. Such
is the power of cinema.
Absorbing and impressively original as the film is, it does make you feel somewhat
uncomfortable. As you watch, you become awkwardly aware of your role as a
voyeur sneaking your way into what is the most intimate of human relationships.
© James Travers 2003
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Next Philippe Harel film:
Les Randonneurs (1997)
Film Synopsis
François and Muriel meet at a mutual friend's party. He is
39, a businessman, married with a son. She is 22 and lives alone, although
she has a boyfriend, Pascal. They agree to meet up again afterwards.
The relationship begins awkwardly, neither being sure whether it is love
or friendship the other is offering. François wants to take
the relationship further, but Muriel resists, reluctant to get herself involved
with a married man. Finally, the young woman gives in to the older
man's demands, but the affair still remains ambiguous and non-commital on
both sides.
To keep all this from his wife Irène, François finds he must
resort to lies, and meanwhile Muriel continues seeing Pascal. The relationship
becomes increasingly strained as the two lovers go on meeting and parting,
each resenting the other for not willing to commit fully to the love affair.
To save his marriage, François ends up accompanying his wife on a long
vacation to Mexico. When he returns, he finds that Muriel has left
Pascal and has started seeing another man, Romain...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.