Film Review
For her third film - after her popular comedy
Toi
et moi (2006) - director Julie Lopes-Curval takes us into
darker territory, exploring the complexities of the mother-daughter
relationship whilst also offering a thoughtful, if not downright
provocative, commentary on where women's pursuit of personal freedom
over the past fifty years has led them. A much deeper, far more
nuanced film than Lopes-Curval's previous offerings,
Mères et filles has a
deceptive naivety which is a little off-putting at first, but as you
get into the film, as the exquisite personal traumas of the three main
female protagonists are slowly unveiled, it becomes evident that this
is quite a sophisticated piece of cinema, delicately crafted by a young
filmmaker who shows far greater promise than her first two films would
suggest.
The film's three central female protagonists - three generations of the
same family - represent how women have changed over the last half a
century, from a domestic slave chained to the kitchen sink, her
personal ambitions frustrated by a dominant husband and a society which
insists that a woman's place is in the home, to the fully liberated
modern woman who regards starting a family as an unfortunate damper on
her career progression. The film's almost relentlessly
melancholic tone (which comes partly from its location, on a bleak
windswept piece of French coastline) suggests that the constant pursuit
of freedom is inherently self-defeating, since today's woman is hardly
freer than her 1950s equivalent - the former was chained to the family
homestead, the latter is bound hand and foot to the corporate
cogwheel. It is the in-between-generation (the baby boomers) who
seem to have been most successful in achieving a happy compromise
between career and family. The film's conclusion is that the
pendulum has perhaps swung too far, to the detriment of both society
and individual women.
Whilst this is pretty much a conventionally made film drama, it has one
stylistic touch that works particularly well, namely the way that the
central character Audrey (Marina Hands) engages with her grandmother's
tragic story, through a series of flashbacks. The latter have a
kitsch artificiality (reminiscent of a low-grade soap opera) which
never lets us forget that what we are seeing is Audrey's simplistic
interpretation of her grandmother's life, a kind of mirror by which she
becomes aware of the present failings of her own life. The film
is less about the plight of women in the 1950s and more about how
today's women cope with the freedoms they apparently have - freedoms
which seem, paradoxically, to negate rather than enhance personal
fulfilment. The claustrophobic old house which Audrey moves into,
in an attempt to try to connect with her absent grandmother, reveals
how confined her life is and how few choices she really has. She
sees an abortion as the only way to deal with an unwelcome pregnancy;
otherwise she must give up her well-paid job and become a home drone,
financially dependent on a man whose general utility outside the
bedroom is non-existent. It is not her grandmother she is looking
for as she rakes over old coals; it is herself, her true self.
Marina Hands, a superbly introspective performer with a potent
screen presence, brings as much depth and poignancy to her portrayal of
the soul-searching Audrey as she did in her most celebrated role, in
Pascale Ferran's
Lady Chatterley
(2006). She is perfectly complemented by Catherine Deneuve
who, in a surprisingly tough and unglamorous role, succinctly conveys
the anxieties of a mother who just cannot make contact with her
daughter, partly because she is herself tormented by a longstanding
guilt over what became of her own mother. The scenes with Hands
and Deneueve are the best the film has to offer and have more than a
touch of Chekhov about them - the woman and daughter who so visibly
need each other and yet who appear hopelessly incapable of making the
connection that will enable them both to climb out of their personal
quagmires. Marie-Josée Croze is just as well cast as the
most tragic of the three women, the housewife who, trapped in her cosy
1950s time bubble, hasn't even the slightest possibility of escape and
yet, curiously, she appears far less unhappy, far less neurotic than
the daughter and granddaughter who follow her.
Scripted and directed with intelligence and economy, authentically
performed by a high calibre cast,
Mères
et filles is a meticulously composed film drama that is both
insightful and unsettling (its only defect being an abrupt and not
entirely convincing ending). Whilst the film is an effective
commentary on female emancipation since the 1950s, it is just
as interesting in what it has to say about how
men
have changed over the same period, from macho posturing ogres who
think they own women body and soul, to what now looks increasingly like
the weaker sex, the victims of a sexual revolution who haven't quite
yet come to grips with the modern woman.
Mères et filles navigates
some highly controversial avenues of debate, but it does so with such
maturity and personal involvement that its provokes far more thought than bile.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.