Film Review
Régis Wargnier, the director who would go on to win the Best
Foreign Language Film Oscar with his epic
Indochine
(1992), made an auspicious feature debut with this viscerally intense
portrait of a man battling against alcoholism.
La Femme de ma vie exhibits little
of the grandeur of Wargnier's subsequent films but it is nonetheless
one of his most accomplished works, a worthy recipient of the 1987
César for the Best First Film. A critical and popular
success, the film also received four further César nominations,
for each of the four principal actors (Christophe Malavoy, Jane Birkin,
Jean-Louis Trintignant and Dominque Blanc).
Largely through Malavoy's stand-out performance (no doubt one of the
best of his career), the film offers the most harrowingly convincing
account of a man (Simon) struggling to overcome his alcohol
dependency. Simon's personal struggle is poignantly
reflected in the lesser crises of the people who surround him, in
particular his guilt-ridden wife Laura and a former alcoholic
keen to offer him support (superbly played by Jane Birkin and
Jean-Louis Trintignant respectively). Making her film debut is
Dominique Blanc, an actress of exceptional talent who almost steals the
film with her arresting portrayal of a woman who has literally reached
the end of her tether. Blanc would take the lead in
Wargnier's next film,
Je suis le seigneur du château
(1989), and had a supporting role in
Indochine
(1992).
The one other notable name in the credits is Elsa Lunghini, who had
made her film debut a few years earlier in Claude Miller's
Garde
à vue (1981). Here
, the talented 13-year old gets to
sing the song
T'en va pas
which was subsequently released as a hit record. The song reached
number one in the French pop charts and made Lunghini an overnight
star, under the name Elsa.
La
Femme de ma vie may have launched three very successful careers
but the main reason for watching it is that it is a captivating piece of
film drama in its own right, a sensual and sensitive work directed with
suprising maturity by a first-time filmmaker and performed with exquisite veracity by a
superlative cast.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Régis Wargnier film:
Je suis le seigneur du château (1989)
Film Synopsis
Simon was once an acclaimed virtuoso violinist, before he became a
alcoholic and sank into the mire of depression. His life is
ruined, and even his wife Laura can do nothing for him. Then
Simon meets Pierre, who has gone through the same personal crisis as
him and found a way out. With Pierre's help, Simon begins to make
a recovery. But Laura sees in Pierre a rival whom she can barely
tolerate...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.