Film Review
Le Quatrième morceau de la
femme coupée en trois... A film with such an
intriguing title can hardly fail to be a cinematic oddity, and, if
critical reaction to it is anything to go by, it certainly lives up to
its promise. The film's subject matter could not be more
banal. A scatterbrained young woman locks herself out of her hire car
whilst shopping and goes slowly bananas whilst waiting for someone to
turn up with a duplicate key. When her knight in shining armour
fails to put in an appearance, she settles down on a bench with a
cuddly elephant and relives some happy
childhood memories. What could be more ordinary? Yet,
incredible as it may seem, this is far from being an ordinary film...
So what is this film meant to be? An existential study of a
woman coping with the traumas of mid-life crisis, a post-modern
reaction to feminism, or a dark satire on the stresses and
strains of modern life...? And how are we to interpret the
title? Just what is the fourth part of a woman cut in
three? The more you try to analyse and rationalise the
film, the more mystifying and complex it appears. Your first
impression is that this is a conventional shoestring budget French
film d'auteur, an exercise in what
the French would glibly term
nombrilisme,
navel gazing. But first impressions can be deceptive and as you
succumb to this film's subtle charms you begin to experience something
much more profound. Listen carefully and you may just hear the silent scream
of a soul pining for an unattainable freedom. (Either that or I
desperately need to get my ears syringed.)
This remarkable film was directed by Laure Marsac, her first
feature. Prior to this Marsac had pursued a successful acting
career, having debuted in Jacques Doillon's
La
Pirate (1984), in a role that won her the Most Promising
Actress César in 1985. The skill and refreshing originality of
Marsac's work reveal a novice director of surprising confidence
and maturity, an auteur in the kindest sense of the term.
Overlaying her film's striking realism is a strangely indefinable
poetry that gradually draws us into the troubled inner world of the
main protagonist (who is sympathetically played by Marsac
herself). The static camerawork of the first (main) part of the
film emphasises the exquisite dullness of everyday life, making a stark
contrast with the balletic artistry of the dreamlike concluding
sequence in which the heroine revisits happier days on a Route Nationale. Witty, yet
poignant, alluring, yet elusive,
Le
Quatrième morceau de la femme coupée en trois is a
spellbinding, masterfully composed work that is both an enigma and a
delight.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Louise Coleman is a 30-year-old Parisian who is desperately looking for a
new direction in her life. A hopeless daydreamer, she finds it hard
to keep up with the pace of modern living. She has been meaning to
get herself a car for years, but she keeps putting it off. Now, by
learning to drive, she believes this will provide her with the freedom she
needs to make a fresh start. But once she has passed her driving test
Louise soon realises that things are not going to be this easy. One
day, through carelessness she manages to lock herself out of her car.
This instantly brings back a flood of childhood memories. With mixed
feelings, she recalls all those carefree car journeys she used to take when
she was a little girl, in the company of her mother. Those days seems
so far away now...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.