Film Review
Sale comme un ange is another dark portrayal
of human sexuality from Catherine Breillat, her fourth in a series of provocative and
unequivocally personal films. What is most striking about this film is its sense
of realism and the totally unromantic way in which a romantic liaison is portrayed.
By showing a consensual love affair between a young woman and a much older man in a sordid,
almost animalistic way, Breillat risks offending the sensibilities of her public, but
her boldness works - the end result stands as one of her most haunting and poetic films.
Claude Brasseur's portrayal of an ennui-burdened middle-aged policeman is as poignant
as it is grotesque, whilst his co-star Lio conveys the conflicting emotions of a willing
adulteress with great depth and sensitivity. This is not an easy film to watch -
the austere realist style and limp policier backstory drains the film of surface emotion,
making it a hard film to engage with. Yet it is the unusual, convention-breaking
style of the film which ultimately makes it so appealing, which allows us to be drawn
into the brittle lives of its protagonists and to appreciate their torn inner feelings.
This is not a film about surface emotions, but about something much deeper, much more
unsettling. It's about an eternal longing that can neither be controlled nor rationalised
- a familiar tale, but told in a daringly raw fashion.
© James Travers 2006
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Next Catherine Breillat film:
Romance (1999)
Film Synopsis
A fifty-something police inspector Georges Deblache appears to have had enough of life.
A confirmed bachelor, who has grown used to dinners-for-one and nights with prostitutes,
he envies his young partner, Didier Theron, who has recently married an attractive woman,
Barbara. Deblache realises that he is intensely drawn to Barbara and she, although
disgusted by her feelings, gives into the desire she also has to sleep with him…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.