Film Review
Director Eléonore Faucher's long overdue follow-up to her captivating debut
feature
Brodeuses (2004) is a similarly
low-key realist drama, one that deftly evokes the impact of childhood
experiences on our present adult consciousness.
Gamines was adapted from a novel of
the same title by the actress-turned-author Sylvie Testud, who,
appropriately, takes the lead role in the film. Whilst the
story is noticeably lacking in originality and depth, the film is
impressively directed and well-acted by a more than capable cast, and it engages with the spectator at a
profound level, perhaps because it deals honestly with some basic truths of human
experience we can all readily relate to. The importance of
family, the need to have an idea of where one comes from and feel the
continuity between the past and the present - these are just some of
the themes that
Gamines handles
with delicacy and charm. It may not be as skilfully composed or
as moving as Faucher's excellent, highly recommended first film, but it is nonetheless a
mature and evocative piece of cinema.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
I'm not one to complain. I'd much rather have a laugh and enjoy myself.
For the last thirty years or so, I've reacted to all those glum sympathetic
looks by saying: 'I don't have a father, but I don't mind. That's just
the way it is. But I do have a photo...' I also have two
sisters and an Italian mother, but I have to be careful not to mention Him
before Her. Italian mothers have long memories and an unforgiving nature,
a bit like a volcano. It probably doesn't help that I am the spitting
image of Him, especially when I laugh. I want to be more Italian than
my sisters, which is why I'm always getting myself into trouble. It's
just my way...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.