Film Review
After failing spectacularly to find an audience for his self-indulgent
gay-themed odyssey
Homme au bain
(2010), writer-director Christophe Honoré returns to much safer
ground with
Les Bien-aimés (a.k.a.
The Beloved), his second
flirtation with the musical comedy genre after his previous hit
Les Chansons d'amour
(2007). It is the kind of film that Honoré does best
and which plays well to a sophisticated French audience, one that
shamelessly looks back to the halcyon days of the French New Wave
whilst tackling, with a modern auteur voice, themes which today's
spectator can readily engage with.
Les Bien-aimés is
Honoré's most ambitious film to date, an emotional epic that
crams four decades into a generous runtime of two hours and fifteen
minutes, subtly suggesting how world events (notably the AIDS epidemic
of 80s) have influenced male-female relationships and attitudes towards
free love over that period.
Given the scope of the film, it is perhaps surprising that
Honoré manages to retain his trademark intimacy, that knack he
has for taking us into the inner worlds of his protagonists so that we
may experience something of their personal traumas, with the minimum of
dramatic artifice. That he achieves this so successfully in this
film is in no small measure down to the calibre of cast that he
assembles, the most distinguished ensemble of acting talent to have
graced any of his films to date. Catherine Deneuve
appears to be as at home in Honoré's idiosyncratic universe as
the director's former collaborators Ludivine Sagnier, Louis Garrel and
Chiara Mastroianni - all have that rare gift for projecting their
character's insecurities, particularly a desperate need for a love that
can never be met, through an assured persona which completely belies
such emotional fragility. Legendary filmmaker Milos Forman (of
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
fame) and American actor Paul Schneider are unexpected additions,
bringing an international flavour to the tasty Honoré
bouillabaisse that goes down surprisingly well.
That Christophe Honoré is a devotee of the French New Wave is
apparent in all of his films, but perhaps never as visibly as in
Les Bien-aimés, which is his
most blatant homage to the directors who have influenced him most,
notably Jacques Demy and François Truffaut. Beginning in
1963, when the Nouvelle Vague was at its peak of popularity in France,
the film looks like a stylish collision of Demy's
Les Parapluies de Cherbourg
(1964) and Truffaut's
L'Homme qui aimait les femmes
(1977). The upbeat tone of this opening instalment, which depicts
bright young things revelling in a new era of permissiveness, makes a
stark contrast with the place the film ends up at in its melancholic
final episodes. It is not clear whether Honoré is making
an ironic point about our tendency to see the past through rose-tinted
glasses (1963 was, after all, just one year on from the Cuban Missile
Crisis, an event that came close to triggering World War Three) or
whether he really is acknowledging that the world is now a much darker
place than it was forty years ago. Honoré's narrative
device of comparing the experiences of a mother in the 1960s with her
daughter in the present day would suggests the latter, until we realise that
the mother's happy-go-lucky youth may simply be a naïve construct
of her daughter's imagination. The grass always appears greener
when we try to look through the eyes of others.
Coming so soon after
Les Chansons
d'amour,
Les Bien-aimés
does at first come across as a director's cynical attempt to cash in on
an earlier success. However, whilst it does tread similar ground
and repeats some of that earlier film's motifs marginally less
successfully (the musical numbers are nowhere near as good), it is
nonetheless a substantial piece of cinema in its own right, to be noted
for the sensitivity with which the characters are drawn and the skill
with which Honoré weaves complex emotional crises into a deceptively
simple narrative. Catherine Deneuve once again works her
magic with a heartrending portrayal of a mother who must live not only
with her own regrets but also with the knowledge that she cannot shield
the person she most loves from life's cruelties. Meanwhile, her
on-screen and off-screen daughter Chiara Mastroianni proves herself her
mother's equal with a riveting performance that is easily one of her
finest to date. For the sentimentally minded,
Les Bien-aimés is an
engaging emotional rollercoaster, one that can hardly fail to play
havoc with those delicately tuned heartstrings.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Christophe Honoré film:
Les Malheurs de Sophie (2016)
Film Synopsis
In the early 1960s, Madeleine makes a living in Paris as a prostitute.
She cannot help falling in love with one of her clients, a young Czechoslovakian
doctor named Jaromil, and within no time they are married and beginning a
new life together in Prague. For a few years, the couple lead a tranquil
life, with their daughter Véra, but then the Soviet troops invade.
With her husband unwilling to abandon his home country, Madeleine heads back
to Paris alone with her daughter. In the late 1970s, she is happily
married to another man, François, when Jaromil suddenly decides to
re-enter her life. What should Madeleine do when her first husband
invites her to live with him again? It is the most difficult decision
of her life, and in the end she finds Jaromil's unlikely offer too good to
resist...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.