Film Review
After a run of films set in the French capital, director Christophe
Honoré makes a fleeting return to his native Brittany for his latest offering
of emotional turbulence and existentialist angst, a film that combines
the uncompromising sobriety of his earlier
Ma
mère (2004) with the poetic melancholia of
Dans
Paris (2006). The film derives its intriguing title (far
better than the English equivalent
Making Plans for Lena)
from an old Breton legend which is re-enacted towards
the middle of the film, an amusing if somewhat pointless digression
from a narrative that only just manages to hold itself together.
The legend concerns a wayward young woman who had a reputation for
dancing her suitors to death and ended up marrying the Devil.
Considering what he puts his actors and audiences through you might
easily reckon Honoré to be the reincarnation of this Breton
virago.
A compelling and perceptive study of a woman caught in the maelstrom of
mid-life crisis,
Non ma fille, tu
n'iras pas danser is arguably Christophe Honoré's best
film to date. It is not flawless but it has a maturity and
sensitivity, both in its mise-en-scène and writing, which is
less apparent in his previous work. The film is adapted from the
novel
Week-end de chasse à la
mère by Geneviève Brisac, who collaborated with
Honoré on the screenplay. Not only are the
characters well-drawn (and skilfully portrayed by an exceptional cast)
but their inner turmoils are reflected in the lyrical
cinematography of the Breton landscape (which includes the
picturesque Monts d'Arrée), complemented by Alex Beaupain's
eerily eloquent score. Despite the sombre tone of the film, there
is a certain amount of compassion and tenderness mixed in with the cruel strokes of irony.
In one of her most impressive screen performances to date, Chiara Mastroianni
plays the central character Lena with breathtaking conviction,
captivating in her moving yet slightly disturbing portrayal of a woman
teetering on the brink of a nervous breakdown.
Lena is both symbolic of the
modern woman and an individual who finds herself trapped by the demands
of convention and the people she knows. Her attempts to assert
her independence and follow her own will merely hasten her descent into
Hell. Like the woman in the Breton legend, her appetite for
freedom causes her to destroy everything around her and merely drives
her into the arms of Lucifer. Through this complex and humane
study of a woman in crisis, Christophe Honoré amply shows that he can
hold his own amongst France's leading auteur filmmakers.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Christophe Honoré film:
Les Bien-aimés (2011)
Film Synopsis
Since the break-up of her marriage, Léna has coped as best she
may to bring up her two young children single-handedly. But when
she returns to her family home in Brittany, she faces her toughest
ordeal. Her parents are so determined to patch up her life that
they have invited her ex-husband, Nigel, to stay with them. The
road to Hell is paved with good intentions...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.