Film Review
After her promising debut feature
Les
Mains libres (2010), actress-turned-director Brigitte Sy goes
into retro mode with a vengeance with her second film, an intense
romantic drama based on Albertine Sarrazin's autobiographical novel
L'Astragale. First published
in 1965, Sarrazin's provocative novel was both a critical success and a
bestseller, and was soon adapted into a
film of the same title by
director Guy Casaril, starring Marlène Jobert and Horst
Buchholz. Avoiding the lurid excesses of Casaril's 1969 film, Sy
brings a blistering female sensitivity to her interpretation of the
novel, whilst adopting a style that somehow manages to evoke both the
gritty French thrillers of the 1950s and stylishly seductive romances
of the French New Wave - a kind of
Du rififi chez les hommes meets
La
Peau douce.
The film probably owes its crisp Nouvelle Vague look to Sy's
association with the auteur filmmaker Philippe Garrel, who, a
self-proclaimed disciple of Jean-Luc Godard, has favoured monochrome
over colour in recent years. Sy not only appeared in several of
Garrel's films - including his best work
J'entends plus la guitare
(1991) - but is also the mother of his two children, Louis and Esther
Garrel, both of whom appear in her film. The script was co-authored
with Serge Le Peron, a former critic on the Cahiers du cinéma
whose own films include the idiosyncratic thrillers
L'Affaire Marcorelle (2000) and
J'ai vu tuer Ben Barka
(2005). By stripping down Sarrazin's novel to the bare
essentials, Sy and Le Peron deliver a vivid romance entwined with a
powerfully moving character study about a woman striving to free
herself from the yoke of male dominance in a world where women are
expected to be subservient to the male sex.
L'Astragale could so easily
have been a barren exercise in style if Sy had not had the good fortune
to cast two remarkable actors in the lead roles - Leïla Bekhti and
Reda Kateb, last seen together in Jacques Audiard's
Un
prophète (2009). Over the past half-decade,
Bekhti and Kateb have risen to become two of French cinema's most
highly regarded actors, and their chalk-and-cheese pairing in Sy's film
as two star-crossed lovers set on a course for destruction is nothing
less than inspired. The barely contained passion of Bekhti's
rebellious proto-feminist makes a stark contrast with Kateb's more
distant outlaw, and whilst these can't help resembling classic noir
archetypes, both actors give them a strikingly modern resonance.
It is to the film's detriment that the secondary characters are
underwritten to the extent that they barely register, but with two such
captivating lead actors this hardly matters.
L'Astragale is an elegantly crafted
cri de coeur in which a
woman's contradictory yearning for domination and liberation are
expressed with a searing authenticity.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
One night in April 1957, 19-year-old Albertine climbs over the wall of
the prison where she has been serving a sentence for robbery. In
the fall, she breaks a bone in her foot. Luckily Julien is there
to come to her aid; he takes her to a friend in Paris where she can lie
low. As her saviour resumes his criminal life in the provinces,
Albertine recuperates in the capital. After Julien has been
arrested and imprisoned, Albertine has to keep moving to avoid falling
into the hands of the police. Inevitably, she is drawn into a
life of prostitution so that she can survive and remain at liberty...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.