Film Review
Twenty years into her distinguished career, Belgian auteur Chantal Akerman
took a break from her customary minimalist realistic dramas to attempt an
American-style comedy that would appear to be more at home in the oeuvre of
Ernst Lubitsch or Woody Allen.
Un divan à New York certainly
lacks the originality and gravitas of Akerman's earlier work, which is presumably
why most of the critics gave it a mauling, but it manages to be an enjoyable
digression and beneath the surface humour Akerman's favourite themes (notably
alienation in the modern world) are easily discernible.
It was in the 1970s that the filmmaker first made an impact, with daringly
original pieces such as
Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
(1975) and
Les Rendez-vous d'Anna (1978).
Golden Eighties
(1986) was a rare departure into musical comedy, of the Jacques Demy variety.
After the critical failure of
Un divan à New York, Akerman
managed to win back her critics with
La
Captive (2000), an inspired adaptation of Marcel Proust's
La Prisonnière.
Taking the romantic lead roles in Akerman's rom-com are Juliette Binoche
and William Hurt, two charismatic performers who have just thr right chemistry
to make the film work as a light-hearted crowdpleaser. Although barely
a decade into her career, Binoche was already a leading light of French cinema
with an international profile, through such films as Leos Carax's
Les Amants du Pont-Neuf
(1991), Krzysztof Kies'lowski's
Throis
couleurs trilogy (1993) and Peter Kosminsky's
Wuthering heights (1992).
Un divan à New York gave Binoche a welcome opportunity to
develop her skills as a comedic actress, although she appears slightly ill-at-ease
in her role as a seemingly dim and naïve opportunist. Neither
of the lead actors is particularly well-served by the dialogue, which sounds
cheesy and is prone to cliché, and the film's structural flaws become
painfully evident in its second half. That said, Akerman directs the
film with panache and whilst she may not have proved herself the equal of
Woody Allen she nonetheless turns in a film that is both engaging and entertaining.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Chantal Akerman film:
La Captive (2000)
Film Synopsis
Henry Harriston, a successful psychoanalyst living in New York City decides
he needs a break from the constant daily grind of attending to other people's
bruised psyches. He arranges an apartment swap with a Parisian dancer,
Béatrice, although he soon realises that he has made a terrible mistake.
Whereas he is wealthy and impeccably tidy, Béatrice is poor, untidy,
and, it turns out, something of a heart-breaker. Newly installed in
New York, Béatrice can hardly believe her good fortune and before she
knows it she is busy psychoanalysing Henry's patients. When Henry turns
up at his apartment unexpectedly, Béatrice mistakes him for a patient
and starts to offer him treatment. Henry, realising he is love with
Béatrice, feels compelled to go along with the deception...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.