Actress Mélanie Laurent makes her directing debut with this
genre-bending drama which she also scripted and starred in. Les Adoptés is not without
its charms and its first twenty minutes or so reveal a young filmmaker
who certainly has some talent. The film benefits from a strong
cast of talented and likeable performers, who should be credited for
the warmth and conviction they bring to the film. Unfortunately,
Laurent succumbs to just about every pitfall that awaits any first-time
filmmaker, and this shows both in the screenplay, which relies too
heavily on implausible plot devices whilst failing to develop any of
the characters, and the direction, which is at times amateurish and
self-conscious beyond belief. The engaging realism of the first
part of the film is soon swamped by the mawkish sentimentality that
enters the frame near to the midpoint, and what ensues is an agonising
excursion into soggy schmaltz that only the most sentimentally minded
can hope to get through. Laurent's ability as a film director
falls spectacularly short of her undoubted skill as an actress,
although there are doubtless some for whom her brand of slushy and
vacuous melodrama will have an appeal.
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Film Synopsis
Lisa, an aspiring musician in her early thirties, lives in the French town
of Lyon with Marie, her adopted sister, and their over-protective mother.
Bruised by their past experiences of men, the three women have learned to
get by without the male sex and they now lead a harmonious, trouble-free
life together. Lisa has a young son, Léo, from an earlier failed
relationship and she knows that Marie depends on her for moral and emotional
support. The unity of this happy little community comes under threat
when Marie starts an affair with an attractive young man named Alex.
An unexpected tragedy hits Lisa hard and forces her to re-evaluate her priorities...
In the 1920s French cinema was at its most varied and stylish - witness the achievements of Abel Gance, Marcel L'Herbier, Jean Epstein and Jacques Feyder.
From Jean Renoir to François Truffaut, French cinema has no shortage of truly great filmmakers, each bringing a unique approach to the art of filmmaking.