Film Review
Bereavement affects people in different ways, and in the case of Nelly,
the heroine of Laure Duthilleul's debut feature, it involves excessive
bouts of stropiness, a full-on romp with nature and a certain amount of
highly suggestive corpse and coffin hugging. With a less talented
and less sympathetic actress than Sophie Marceau in Nelly's decidedly
wobbly widow's shoes
À ce soir
would be hard to take seriously, and even Marceau looks as if she has
her work cut out as she labours to crowbar a modicum of credibility
into her character's shameless histrionics. The same applies, to
a lesser extent, to virtually every character in the film (even the one
played by the superb Antoine Chappey) - their reaction to a shockingly
suddenly demise is more theatrical than cinematic, and the deeper sense
of loss is somehow overlooked, or else buried several leagues beneath
the surface theatricality. It's the kind of film that, in
retrospect, would probably have worked better as a stage play.
Laure Duthilleul is a name that will already be familiar to French film
enthusiasts. Since the early eighties, she has led a busy acting
career, with around eighty screen credits to her name, including
René Allio's
Le Matelot 512 (1984) and
Claude Berri's
L'Un reste, l'autre part
(2004). As a director, she shows some promise in her first
feature which, whilst somewhat let down by a weak and uneven script,
impresses with its visual flair and quaintly idiosyncratic
poetry. With a rare confidence for a first-time director,
Duthilleul imposes her own personal stamp on the film, eschewing tidy
formalism for a quirky spontaneity which lightens the mood and brings a
subtle, occasionally irreverent, cheeriness to the film's bleak subject
matter.
The apparent inability of the adult characters to cope with the loss of
a husband, friend or family relation is effectively contrasted by the
far more natural (and believable) reactions of the children, and this
is ultimately what redeems the film, along with Franck Louise's eerily
incongruous score and some highly imaginative and highly effective
camerawork.
À ce soir
is the kind of film - an offbeat, unpretentious little drama - in which
Sophie Marceau is at her best, and whilst her Adjani-style theatrics
veer towards outright silliness in a few scenes, her tangible presence
brings an appealing vitality and unpredictability to the film.
Bereavement doesn't just hurt like Hell, it can also send you ever so
slightly mad - Marceau certainly serves up plenty of madness, but the
pain within is somewhat harder to discern.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Awaking early one morning, Nelly finds her husband Manuel is still asleep.
A hardworking doctor, Manuel deserves a lie in, so Nelly leaves him in peace.
She is unconcerned when she finds him still in bed when she turns in for
the night. The next morning, Manuel still hasn't emerged from his slumbers
and it is at this point that Nelly realises he is dead. The shock is
more than she can bear. They are barely middle-aged and she had always
thought that they would grow old together. Now that Manuel has departed
this world Nelly can hardly bring herself to have him buried. It is
up to the couple's friends to rally round and help Nelly overcome her insurmountable
sense of loss...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.