Film Review
Martin Provost's second full-length film (after his 1997 comedy-drama
Tortilla
Y Cinema) is this beautifully realised and exquisitely poignant social realist
drama, set in a working class area of Marseille (a world apart from the sun-drenched
Marseille of Robert Guédiguian's
Marius et Jeannette).
Rigorously unburdened by sentimentality, the film is cruel, honest, and occasionally funny;
it tells a simple story, but is rich in character detail, and says so much about the kind
of world we now live in. Julie-Marie Parmentier is not just convincing as
a young woman trying to face up to an unwanted pregnancy - she is captivating and,
in a few sequences, heart breaking. Provost's portrayal if Juliette's
world is at first depressing, but, like the sun breaking through the clouds, the
mood changes and the film concludes on a note of optimism, whilst still retaining the
keen realist edge.
Even though Provost eschews poetry and style in favour of stark
realism, his film is poetic in its raw simplicity and in its moving, point-of-view depiction
of a young woman's sense of isolation at a time when help and comfort are most needed.
The only thing that doesn't quite ring true is the way in which the character Léonard
is introduced into the narrative (although Tom Novembre's sympathetic portrayal
makes it easy to overlook this one plot contrivance).
In summary,
Le Ventre de Juliette is an engaging,
socially relevant drama which is composed with
artistic talent and genuine human tenderness. An excellent cast (which includes
noteworthy contributions from the superb ensemble that comprises Stéphane Rideau,
Carmen Maura and Ariane Ascaride), coupled with some effective, suitably moody photography,
allows Martin Provost to make his mark as an auteur of some stature with this highly recommended film.
Provost would make an even bigger impression with his subsequent, widely
acclaimed biographical dramas
Séraphine (2008)
and
Violette (2013).
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In Marseilles, Juliette and Mathias, both from rough, working class backgrounds, are madly
in love. But when Juliette reveals that she is pregnant, Mathias is shocked and
ends their relationship. No one seems to want the unborn baby - even Juliette's
mother, a former actress who is now reduced to running a small boutique, advises her to
have an abortion. Juliette is on the brink of despair. And then, one day,
a stranger her life…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.