Film Review
In making this solemn drama, the actress Myriam Boyer set out to evoke her own memories of
life in France in the decade after WWII and to tell a simple story about ordinary people,
the kind of people she knew as a young girl.
With its authentic recreation of the period (including convincing
exterior locations),
La Mère Christain succeeds in
capturing the mood of France in the early 1950s, although
direct references to the war are, as might be expected, kept to a minimum. What
we see is the sorry aftermath of the war - people rebuilding their lives and trying to put behind
them the hardship of their wartime experiences. Needless-to-say, the younger members
of the community are more optimistic about the future than their older neighbours.
Whilst the film has some commendable qualities, it is somewhat hampered by Boyer's
fairly unimaginative direction and a screenplay that is often tediously banal.
The acting is hard to fault (Boyer is at her best in the lead role) but the
secondary characters are so poorly developed that they have next to no impact. It is
a reasonable attempt by a first time director and the film is not without charm.
It would be twelve years before Boyer directed her next feature-length film, this time for French
televison: an adaptation of Romain Gary's novel
La Vie devant soi,
which had previously been
adapted for cinema
by Moshé Mizrahi in 1977.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the early 1950s, Mother Christain runs a small bistro in the town of Lyons. Alone
and impoverished, she is scarred by her recent tragic experiences. Her husband died
during the war and her young daughter was found dead in a coal cellar a few years ago.
Refusing to accept that her daughter died in an accident, the fifty-year old widow carefully
scrutinises her clientele to determine who killed her daughter...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.