Film Review
This striking portrait of rural family life marked Sandrine Veysset's remarkable directoral
debut. The film was widely acclaimed in France, winning Veysset a César and
the prestigious Louis-Delluc Prize in 1996.
This is not a comfortable film to watch, and the lack of coherent narrative does make
the film appear slow and overly long. It is much closer to a documentary than a
conventional film drama, but the quality of the photography and Dominique Reymond's emotionally
charged performance as the struggling mother gives it a distinctive artistic quality.
The first part of the film is perhaps the most moving, with the hardship and stress of
rural life being gradually exposed amidst the halcyon beauty of the sun-soaked French
countryside. As the film sinks further into gloom and doom, mirroring the change
in the seasons, it becomes a little repetitive and tedious, and the final note of optimism
which ends the film has a whiff of sentimentality about it. Despite this, the film
is worth watching, mainly for the artistic flair Veysset demonstrates in telling this
moving and highly relevant social drama.
© James Travers 2000
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Next Sandrine Veysset film:
Victor... pendant qu'il est trop tard (1998)
Film Synopsis
In the south of France, a young woman works all hours on her common-law
husband's market garden farm whilst struggling to bring up her seven young
children. Although she is a kind and gentle soul, always willing to
do what is required of her without complaint, her husband shows her no compassion
and treats her like a slave, using and abusing her as he pleases during his
infrequent visits. Mercifully, this tyrannical brute spends most of
his time away from the farm, living with his legitimate family when he is
not otherwise occupied taking his produce to market. The neglected
second wife soldiers on as best she can but the arduous, comfortless nature
of her life is gradually sapping her morale. In the end, her thoughts
turn to escaping from this dreadful existence...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.