Film Review
Winner of the Prix Louis Delluc in 2005,
Les Amants réguliers is director Philippe
Garrel's interpretation of the turbulent events of May 1968, informed by his own
hands on experiences of the time. Adopting the cinematic style of the great French
New Wave directors (notably Jean Eustache, Jean-Luc Godard and Jacques Rivette), Garrel
succeeds in transporting us back to the late 1960s, to a period of immense
social and political upheaval, and also
one of great artistic release. The film's two principal actors - Louis Garrel (the
director's talented son, who won the Most Promising Actor César in 2006 for
his performance in this film) and Clotilde Hesme bear more than a passing resemblance to two
of the most prominent icons of la Nouvelle Vague, Jean-Pierre Léaud and Anna
Karina. Meanwhile, William Lubtchansky's lush black-and-white cinematography
creates the illusion that the film is a genuine product of the era in which it is set.
As a genuine homage to the French New Wave and for its strikingly authentic depiction of the 1968
riots, the film does have a great deal going for it. However,
Les
Amants réguliers does tend to look more like an over-affectionate
pastiche than an original work of cinema, and the inspired touch of Garrel's earlier films,
notably his masterpiece
J'entends plus la guitare (1991)
is lacking. Whilst
Les Amants réguliers perfectly
reproduces the style and form of a great French auteur piece from the 1960s, it doesn't quite
possess the vitality and raw poetry that made such films so unforgettable. So, whereas, for example,
Jean Eustache's four-hour long
La Maman et la putain (1973) is an absorbing
work that is powerfully expressive of the existential preoccupations of young people
living through uncertain times,
Les Amants réguliers, at just
under three hours, feels somehow lacking in deeper meaning and merely skates across
the surface of very deep waters.
Philippe Garrel's appropriation of some of the more familiar New Wave
techniques - such as Jean-Juc Godard's device of actors talking to camera in an improvised
manner - creates an instant nostalgia hit for Nouvelle Vague junkies but
as often as not these look like slavish imitation for its own sake.
Most disappointingly, whilst the film amply conveys the mood of the era
in which it is set, it doesn't really shed much of an insight into how
those who participated in the May 1968 riots felt. The director's
earlier film
Le
Révélateur (1968) is eminently more successful in this respect.
© James Travers 2006
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Next Philippe Garrel film:
Un été brûlant (2011)
Film Synopsis
May 1968. The streets of Paris are ablaze as students and riot police unwittingly
re-enact the famous barricade scene from
Les Misèrables
. One of these students is François Dervieux, a 20 year-old
student, idealist and aspiring poet, who, along with his opium-smoking friends, has taken
up the revolutionary cause. At a party, he meets Lilie, a young sculptor who seems
to share his ideals and with whom he falls madly in love…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.