Film Review
The scenario is a familiar one. The bored wife, the complacent
husband and the Latin lover. We all know the story.
It is the eternal triangle, a tale of lust and infidelity that can only
end in disaster, or, at the very least, a houseful of broken china. The plot is as well-trodden as the floor
coverings in Hampton Court Palace and yet in this, her latest film,
Catherine Corsini gives it a modern twist that makes it relevant for
today's discerning cinema audience.
Partir is as much an expression of
a woman's right to live her life as she chooses as it is a thoroughly
engrossing piece of film drama.
With its unashamed sensuality, authentic depiction of male-female
conflict and deathly dark undercurrents,
Partir feels like an overt homage
to François Truffaut (a director whom Corsini greatly
admires). The references to
La Peau douce (1964) and
La
Femme d'à côté (1981) are not too hard
to spot, and music by Truffaut collaborators Georges Delerue and
Antoine Duhamel powerfully evokes the romanticism and darkness of
Truffaut's tragic melodramas. The spectre of
Françoise Sagan can also be felt in the film's characterisation
of an illicit romance as something that is both beautiful and terrible,
a delirium of the senses that arouses the best and worst of human
passions.
As well as being superbly directed,
Partir
also offers some sublime contributions from such talented performers as
Kristin Scott Thomas, Sergi López and Yvan Attal.
Kristin Scott Thomas needs absolutely no introduction and her
performance is just as you would expect - intelligent, compassionate
and unceasingly believable. Thomas brings to her portrayal an
intensity which lends her character the aspect of a tragic heroine,
conveying a real sense of desperation as she tries to grasp what may be
her last chance of happiness. Whilst Thomas dominates this film,
she has some fine support from Sergi López and Yvan Attal, who
complement one another perfectly as the lover and the husband - the one
virile and passionate, the other cold and manipulative. With
three such charismatic performers, the film's explosive potential is
fully realised.
Until recently, Catherine Corsini has received little in the way of
serious critical acclaim for her work. Her previous successes,
La
Nouvelle Eve (1999) and
La Répétition
(2001), both appear pretty lightweight in comparison with this latest
offering, a full-bodied fusion of erotic thriller and romantic drama
that is directed with flair and confidence.
Partir has a reality, a humanity
and a feverish intensity that sets it way apart from Corsini's other
films and hopefully marks the beginning of an exciting new phase in
this director's career.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Suzanne has grown tired of her comfortable middle-class existence.
Now she is forty she yearns for new challenges and decides to resume her
old career as a physiotherapist. Her husband Samuel encourages her
in her new enterprise and soon she is overseeing the construction of her
new private clinic. The building work is well under way when Suzanne
notices the site foreman, Ivan, and becomes inexplicably drawn to him.
He is nothing like her husband. He is rough, muscular and has none
of the bourgeois polish that Samuel and her other friends have. Ivan,
a Spanish labourer who has spent time in prison, belongs to another, earthier
world - and yet Suzanne finds him irresistible.
The middle-aged woman is guilt-stricken when she causes Ivan to be injured
in an accident. Unable to work, the latter accepts an offer from his
besotted employer to accompany him on a trip to Spain to visit his daughter,
whom he has not seen for some time. This is merely an excuse for Suzanne
to get to know Ivan better. Before either of them knows it they are
caught up in a tempestuous love affair that makes it impossible for them
to separate. In the end, Suzanne decides to run away from her husband
and begin a new life with her Spanish lover. Unfortunately, Samuel
has no intention of letting her go...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.