Film Review
One of Agnès Varda's most critically acclaimed films,
Sans toit ni loi tells
the moving story of a young woman who rejects society and civilisation so that she can
pursue her dream of living entirely freely in the countryside she loves. It is a
brutally harsh and unsentimental film, depressingly pessimistic in that it shows such
freedom can never be attained, no matter how determined the individual may be. The
danger of starvation, physical attack and illness rapidly quench the illusion of freedom
which living rough may appear to offer.
The film is closer to a documentary than a traditional film drama, an approach which lends
a shocking realism to the piece whilst distancing the spectator from the central character,
the vagabond Mona, who remains elusive and enigmatic throughout. Mona is played
by Sandrine Bonnaire in what is a remarkable and moving performance, for which the actress
was justly rewarded with a Best Actress César. The film itself won the prestigious
Golden Lion award at Venice in 1985.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Agnès Varda film:
Jane B. par Agnès V. (1987)
Film Synopsis
One cold winter's morning, a farm worker is surprised to come across the
body of a young woman in a ditch. From her appearance - her clothes
are torn and dirty, her hair and face filthy - it is at once apparent that
she has been living rough for some time before she died. In an attempt
to identify the girl and learn where she came from, the disparate individuals
who met her during the weeks before her death try to piece together her story.
Calling herself Mona, with all her worldly possessions stowed carefully away
in her backpack, the girl struck up a friendship with a young man named David.
Together they spent several idyllic days together, smoking grass in an abandoned
château, before parting company.
After spending some time with a community of shepherds, Mona resumed her
cross-country wanderings and hooked up with a tree doctor, whom she assisted
in her work for a while. After this, the strange girl moved in with
a friendly Tunisian vine pruner, but the latter's entourage soon become hostile
towards her and she was forced to resume her travels. Reaching a town,
she gets herself blind drunk and falls prey to a gang of rowdy thugs.
Having lost everything she has, including her tent and her duvet, in a fire,
Mona is forced to take refuge in a greenhouse. Her time is fast running
out...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.