Film Review
La Repentie sees Isabelle Adjani's long awaited
return to the big screen after an absence of six years - her last film being Jeremiah
Chechik's justly reviled
Diabolique (1996). It is hardly
the most inspiring or promising of comebacks - her performance in this unsatisfying hotchpotch
of romantic drama and noir-ish crime thriller lacks any kind of emotional quality and
serves merely to weaken what would in any case have been a mediocre, badly composed film.
The film's director is Laetitia Masson, who received some critical acclaim for her previous films,
En
avoir (ou pas) (1995) and
À vendre (1998), films with a hard
social realist edge and a distinctive visual style.
La
Repentie is her fourth film and lacks the cohesion and impact of her previous work;
it feels more like Masson is experimenting with cinematic form for the sake of it,
rather than trying to create a cohesive and impactful piece of cinema.
The casting of Isabelle Adjani alongside another well-regarded screen actor,
Sami Frey, is perhaps the film's strongest suit. They had
previously worked together on Claude Miller's 1983 thriller
Mortelle randonnée and have a natural rapport.
The best moments in
La Repentie are where these two actors are
sharing intimate exchanges of dialogue, although a lacklustre script gives neither
much of an opportunity to shine. Playing Adjani's father is
José Giovanni, an important writer and director of the thriller
genre in the heyday of the French policier - his credits including such
classics as
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969) and
Deux hommes dans la ville (1973).
Adjani's sister is played by Maria Schneider, best known
for her role opposite Marlon Brando in Bernardo
Bertolucci's
Last Tango in Paris (1972).
Any appeal that
La
Repentie may have had is pretty much eroded by some annoying artistic indulgences.
The part that most merits the scissors treatment is the boring as Hell sequence near the
start of the film where Adjani dances for what seems like an eternity on the Promenade
des Anglais in Nice. This is one of many occasions in the film where a popular music
track is inserted and played at maximum volume - not only do the choices of music seem
inappropriate, but in virtually every case the narrative flow is torpedoed for apparently
no good reason. For a director of Masson's standing, the film appears
shockingly ill-judged and stands apart as the weakest entry in her filmography
so far.
© James Travers 2006
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Next Laetitia Masson film:
Pourquoi (pas) le Brésil (2004)
Film Synopsis
An aura of mystique surrounds a woman who has just arrived in Nice by train.
Dressed entirely in black and wearing dark glasses, she can hardly help arousing
fascination, and yet it is quite evident she does not seek the company of
others. Everything about her cries out that she has a past behind her
that she desperately wants to escape from. So here she is, incognito
in a strange town, with a small suitcase in her hand, in search of a new
life. She begins by seeking work at a luxury goods shop, but she is
sent away. Finding a job will not be as easy as she had imagined.
Next we see the same mysterious woman in an exclusive hotel frequented by
the more affluent visitors to the town. Here, she attracts the attention
of a debonair middle-aged man who appears to be as solitary and enigmatic
as she is. Like her, he is a man with a past he cannot talk about,
and like her he needs someone to help him through his present existential
crisis. But the woman's past is not so easily discarded. It is
pursuing her even now, in the guise of a man who is clearly bent on some
malevolent purpose...
© James Travers
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