Film Review
This film marks a slight departure for director Robert Guédiguian, from the social
realist drama into the realms of conventional romantic melodrama. The move is a
slight one, because Guédiguian retains the naturalistic style that bathes all of
his films and contributes so much to their rich humanity and poetry, but it is significant.
As the drama unfolds, at the director's customary unhurried pace, the story and
characters assume an increasingly artificial dimension, culminating in an ending which
would work well in an early 19th century novel but which appears false and anything but
poetic in this 21st century
film d'auteur.
Although the film is not Guédiguian's best (it lacks both lyrical charm
and sincerity of his sublime 1997 work,
Marius
et Jeannette), it has great artistic strength in the form of Renato Berta's
beautiful and melancholic photography, and first class performances from the three lead
actors. As ever, Ariane Ascaride brings depth and poignancy to a thinly drawn character,
her introspective portrayal harrowingly conveying a soul that is tormented by an impossible,
and ultimately destructive, passion.
© James Travers 2005
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Next Robert Guédiguian film:
Mon père est ingénieur (2004)
Film Synopsis
Marie-Jo is a woman who, in early middle age, appears to have all she could
want to lead a comfortable and fulfilled life. She derives satisfaction
from her work as an ambulance driver in Marseille, she is happily married
to Daniel, who runs his own successful construction company, and she has
a well-adjusted teenage daughter Julie. Life could hardly be better.
But Marie-Jo has a secret that is tormenting her. For the past year
she has been carrying on a secret love affair with another man, an attractive
boatman named Marco. So intense are her feelings for her lover that
Marie-Jo has often contemplated leaving Daniel, but she cannot bring herself
to do so. She knows that the double life she has been leading is becoming
unbearable, but she fears how her husband will react to the news that she
has been seeing another man. The dilemma is resolved one day when,
whilst working on a roof, Daniel happens to see his wife lying half-naked
on Marco's patio...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.