Film Review
At the height of her popularity in the early 1980s, Annie Girardot
turned in one of her most authentic performances in this understated
but highly involving romantic drama, scripted and directed with genuine
human feeling by Moshé Mizrahi.
La Vie continue appears modest,
even banal, compared with Mizrahi's earlier racially themed drama
La Vie devant soi (1977), which
won the Oscar for the Best Foreign Language Film in 1978, but its
low-key account of an ordinary woman rebuilding her life in the wake of
a terrible personal calamity is true to life and subtly poignant.
There's not a hint of forced sentimentality here, no blatant
heart-string tugging and certainly no contrived happy ending.
It's just an honest, no frills depiction of someone learning to
appreciate life again after the death of her life partner.
Quietly evoking the recessionary gloom of France in the early 80s, Yves
Lafaye's muted photography lends the film a pleasant melancholic feel
which is effectively complemented by a beautifully wistful score from
Georges Delerue.
Annie Girardot is famous for playing feisty, independently minded
modern women in a diverse range of dramas, comedies and thrillers
across four decades. As the lead character in
La Vie continue, she inhabits a far
more down-to-Earth persona, the kind of modest, unassuming middle-aged
woman you could walk past in the street without noticing. It's a
subtly written role which only an actress of Girardot's talent could
convincingly pull off, and far from being a dull character part the
actress makes it one of her more interesting screen portrayals, one
that offers some fascinating insights into the female psyche. It
would be a sin to overlook the strong contributions from the top notch
supporting cast - Jean-Pierre Cassel and a yoghurt-obsessed Pierre Dux
are both excellent - but this is unmistakably Girardot's film.
Despite its bleak observations on the transience and fragility of human
relationships,
La Vie continue
is a compassionately drawn piece that is surprisingly uplifting.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Jeanne Lemaire leads a simple but contented life with her husband
Gérard and their three children. Her cosy routine is
thrown into a turmoil one Sunday morning when her husband suffers
a fatal heart attack. Suddenly she finds she hasn't enough money
to support herself and her children, and so she ends up having to go
out to work. A friendly Jewish couturier provides Jeanne with
both sympathy and a fulfilling job, and in the meantime she embarks on
a new romantic adventure with a man of her own age, Pierre
Marchand. But just as Jeanne appears to have begun to rebuild her
life her fragile happiness is once again threatened...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.