Film Review
Stéphane Cazes makes a promising directorial debut with this
involving prison drama about a young woman coping with the traumas of
motherhood in the most inhospitable of circumstances.
Mélanie Thierry turns in her finest performance to date, utterly
convincing as a hard-bitten young tearaway who is suddenly forced to
change her ways when she learns she is pregnant. The stark
reality of Thierry's portrayal of a complex woman who is gradually
transformed by the experience of maternity is reinforced by film's
austerely naturalistic design (it helps that the film was shot in a
real prison), but undermined slightly by some obvious lapses in the
screenwriting and mise-en-scène.
Cazes's inexperience as a writer and director manifests itself in the
overladen narrative, which attempts to cram too many themes into too
small a space, often resorting to the irritating shorthand of
cliché and crude Biblical allusions. There is little to
fault in the film's first half, which depicts the mother's pregnancy
and awkward attempts to rear her newborn with understated compassion
and eloquence. Caze confidently straddles the gap between social
realism and melodrama and crafts an original piece of drama that has
its own poetry and charm. Where the film falls down is in its
second half, which takes us into the more familiar territory of a
prison detainee struggling to become a reformed character, in an
environment that makes reform virtually impossible.
Having been forced to give up her child, the heroine must now prove
that she is fit to be a mother by making herself out to be the model
prisoner. It is at this point that Caze begins to unload his big
sack of clichés and nudge his film ever closer to cosy TV-style
melodrama (an impression that is reinforced by the film's overly
intrusive score). What prevents the film from tumbling into the
precipice of derative schmaltz is the welcome presence of Corinne
Masiero, who very nearly steals the show from Mélanie Thierry
with her totally riveting portrayal of a murderous drug addict.
Masiero is one of the great revelations of French cinema in 2012, have
distinguished herself in two of the year's most acclaimed films:
Cyril Mennegun's
Louise Wimmer
(2012) and Jacques Audiard's
De rouille et d'os (2012).
Ombline has many of the
failings you would expect to find in a first feature from a young
filmmaker, but what redeems it is the commitment and sincerity that its
director and his lead actors invest in it. Cazes is not concerned
with making a political point (although the film does offer a pretty
powerful indictment of how today's prison regime treats young mothers);
instead he focuses on the human drama and tells a moving story of
renewal and redemption in the most extraordinary of
circumstances. Despite its obvious shortcomings,
Ombline is a film that is
remarkably easy to engage with, one that offers a powerful tribute to
the courage and resilience of women. Stéphane Cazes is
definitely a name to watch out for.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
After assaulting a police officer, Ombline finds herself in prison, serving
a three year stretch. She is twenty and, with no one to offer her comfort
or support, she faces the future without any hope that things will improve
for her. Then she learns that she is two months pregnant. This
is just what she needed to get her out of the abyss of self-pitying despair
into which she has fallen. Now she has something to live for - a little
boy or girl she can raise on her own. Unfortunately, as the law stands
she is only entitled to keep the newborn child for the first year and half
of its life. After this time, it must be given up to the state and
placed with a foster family.
The prospect of losing her darling infant is not one that Ombline can accept,
and she is determined to keep custody of it when she comes out of prison
and resumes her normal life. The experience of motherhood is about
to profoundly change the young woman, and for the better. She will
do whatever it takes to convince the authorities that she will make a good
mother. Her child is a prize that no one will be able to take away
from her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.