Film Review
The acclaimed Tajik filmmaker Jamshed Usmonov makes his French film
debut with this distinctive mystery drama, a film that combines the
elements of Claude Chabrol's darker psychological dramas with the
glacial austerity of Robert Bresson's late period.
Le Roman de ma femme is Usmonov's
fourth film and is a complete contrast with the three films he made in
his native Tajikistan which brought him international critical
attention:
Flight of the Bee
(1998),
Angel on the Right
(2002) and
To Get to Heaven, First
You Have to Die (2006). The most obvious influence is
Georges Simenon, a writer whom Usmonov evidently admires and seeks to
evoke in this chillingly opaque study in manipulation, which pits a
distraught young widow against a shady and opportunistic older lawyer,
neither of whom is quite what they seem.
Whilst the film falls down slightly in the screenwriting department
(much of the dialogue feels painfully mechanical), intense performances
from Léa Seydoux and Olivier Gourmet, two of French cinema's
finest actors, make it a compelling and deeply disturbing work.
Since her memorable breakthrough in Christophe Honoré's
La Belle personne (2008), Seydoux
has become one of France's most sought-after actresses; among the
directors lining up to exploit her talents are Quentin Tarantino (
Inglourious Basterds), Ridley
Scott (
Robin Hood) and Woody
Allen (
Midnight in Paris).
Le Roman de ma femme marks an
important transition for Léa Seydoux, from adolescent to young
woman, and the performance she gives here is easily one of her
best. The ambiguity and duplicity of Seydoux's role suits her
perfectly - note how her entire personality and appearance seem to
change according to the lighting and the décor around her.
Ève is a character that we are not expected to understand - she
is an enigma, the mystifying femme fatale that no man can resist and no
one can fathom.
Olivier Gourmet's character is just as ambiguous, and this is what makes
the film so unsettling and absorbing. At first Maître
Chollet appears to be the epitome of the humane lawyer, a man who is
devoted to helping others (evidenced by his efforts to get a Tajik
detainee released so that he can visit his wife). But Chollet's
acts of generosity appear too extravagant, and like Ève we
suspect there may be a darker purpose to his actions. There is
obviously a game of cat and mouse in play, but we cannot be sure who is
the predator and who is the prey. Ève and Chollet are
trying a little too hard to present themselves as fragile orphans of
the storm, and it soon becomes apparent that both have a hidden
agenda. The twist ending (which owes far more to Pierre Boileau
and Thomas Narcejac than Simenon) should have us jumping out of our
seats in surprise, but it doesn't. If you watch the film
carefully enough you can see it coming. The only real shock is
that the villain of the piece suffers a crisis of conscience and takes
no pleasure from the cruel victory. Again, you are left wondering
if you have completely misread the two characters.
Le Roman de ma femme is not
the easiest film to engage with and it does struggle at times to get
beyond the conventions of its genre, the classic French bourgeois polar
that Claude Chabrol perfected in the course of his long and
distinguished career. Usmonov may lack Chabrol's finesse, but his
mise-en-scène has its own austere elegance and is striking in
its cold simplicity. It is gratifying to see that Usmonov has not
succumbed to the latest cinematic fad, the camera that is constantly
roving all over the place like a blind inebriate on rollerskates. Instead, his
film adheres to the classical form of mainly static shots, an
old-fashioned approach but one that works beautifully to create a
sustained mood of oppression. With the camera fixed remorselessly
on them, the two main protagonists look as if they are prisoners,
trapped in a web of self-pity and subterfuge. The actors are both
obviously conscious of this and use it to their advantage, seizing our
attention with some riveting moments of introspection and
confrontation.
The editing is as restrained as the camerawork, resulting in a film
that is so languorously paced that it hardly seems to move at all,
something that adds to the tension and the slowly growing sense of
unease. The film's
stillness is of course entirely deceptive, for beneath the surface
placidity we can easily sense the maelstrom of a human feeling that is
raging. Chollet's developing obsession with possessing what
he believes to be the perfect woman has echoes of Hitchcock's
Vertigo (1958), as does
Ève's carefully concealed dual character. Whilst Usmonov cannot match the brilliance of Hitchcock's
direction, he nonetheless delivers a work of comparable depth,
complexity and alluring mystique.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
Ève, a wealthy young woman, is devastated when her husband Paul
goes missing, leaving her with a mountain of debt. As the police
begin their investigation into Paul's mysterious disappearance,
Chollet, a lawyer friend of Paul's, offers moral and financial support
to Ève. Having recently lost his wife, Chollet finds it
easy to sympathise with Ève's predicament and they find mutual
solace in each other's company. But as their relationship becomes
more intimate, the police start to get suspicious. It appears
that Chollet instigated the crisis that ruined Ève's husband,
but for what motive...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.