Film Review
With his fourth feature, a quintessentially Gallic portrayal of
forbidden love that is crafted with exquisite tenderness and delicacy,
Stéphane Brizé confirms his standing as one of France's
leading auteur filmmakers. Whereas most romantic dramas these
days have a tendency to go overboard with the emotions in an attempt to
convey the traumas of love,
Mademoiselle
Chambon takes a more introspective approach that is no less
effective and considerably more satisfying. The film doesn't
throw emotion into our face; it gently arouses the subtlest feelings in
our hearts and induces us, rather than commands us, to sympathise with
the two protagonists as they reluctantly succumb to that fatal
attraction.
Cast as the star-crossed lovers, Vincent Lindon and Sandrine Kiberlain
both turn in a performance of exceptional quality that will doubtless
have the more emotionally sensitive reaching for their hankies long
before the credits roll. The fact that Lindon and Kiberlain
were once husband and wife in real life may have something to do with
the startling reality of their portrayals. Much of the power of
the film lies in the fact that the characters have a profound
reluctance to show their true feelings for one another. They find
it hard to communicate verbally what they feel and yet we have no doubt
that, beneath the surface calm, they are both battling against a storm
of emotions. It is through the subtlest of gestures that they
reveal the first glimmerings of a romantic entanglement, and whilst we
recognise this as a thing of beauty we know also that the ensuing love
affair cannot end well. There are some scenes where Lindon is so
visibly tormented by his character's predicament that you just want to
take Eros by the scruff of his pretty little neck and shove him through
a meat grinder.
As in his previous
Je ne suis pas là pour être
aimé (2005), Brizé crafts a low-key drama that
is sublime in its authenticity and irresistibly poignant. The
plot is about as hackneyed as a plot can be, mined with clumsy
metaphors and clichés that ought to have been pensioned off
decades ago, and yet the film still rings true, such is the sincerity
and genuine emotional feeling that the director and his talented cast
bring to it. In the hands of a lesser filmmaker
Mademoiselle Chambon would most
probably have been unbearably trite, the kind of soap-style melodrama
that went out of fashion in the 1950s. It is testament to
Stéphane Brizé's skill as a writer and director that his
understated adaptation of Eric Holder's novel has such a powerful
resonance, and a quiet contemplative lyricism which makes it one of the
most beguiling romantic dramas in recent years.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Stéphane Brizé film:
Quelques heures de printemps (2012)
Film Synopsis
Jean is a man in his forties who could not be more content with the way his
life is going. He is happily married with a son and enjoys his work
as a mason. He is well-liked by all who know him, and he seems to be,
in every respect, the model citizen. It doesn't bother him that he
is uncultivated and has next to no education. He is good at his job,
and that's all that matters. This all changes when he meets Véronique
Chambon, his son's young schoolteacher. She inhabits a completely different
world to him, and yet he finds himself strangely drawn to her.
After agreeing to give a talk to her class about his work, Jean goes out
of his way to meet up with the amiable teacher. Véronique appears
to be equally taken with him and asks if he will repair a window for her.
Within a few weeks these two seemingly ill-matched people realise they are
in love with each other, but it is a kind of love that Jean has never known
before, more spiritual than physical. A man of few words, he struggles
to express his emotions, whilst she, a woman of some learning, finds it so
easy to say what is in her heart. Despite their different backgrounds,
Jean and Véronique soon find themselves bound to one another, by feelings
that are too powerful to resist...
© James Travers
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