Film Review
Not for the first time, director Christophe Honoré challenges our
assumptions and expectations with a film that is breathtakingly
original in both its subject and its format.
Les Chansons d'amour is a stirring
portrayal of love lost and found in the most romantic city on Earth,
yet filmed in a low-key way that suggests a profound sense of
melancholia and angst. The biting realism conveyed by the
performances and cinematography is undercut by the artifice of the
actors breaking into song at crucial moments in the drama - a bizarre
yet brilliant fusion of drama and musical which is rarely achieved as
effectively outside the great television plays of Dennis Potter.
Honoré brazenly acknowledges the influence of the French New
Wave of the late '50s, early '60s with various motifs borrowed from the
works of Jean-Luc Godard, Jean Eustache, Jacques Demy and François
Truffaut. Lead actor Louis Garrel even evokes something of the
persona of Jean-Pierre Léaud - a charismatic young lover with an
anarchic edge to his florid Left Bank romanticism. Yet
this is a much darker film than anything that came out of the stable of
the Nouvelle Vague, partly because it deals with the near-taboo subjects of
premature death and adolescent homosexuality.
Despite its serious subject matter,
Les
Chansons d'amour is a much lighter and more accessible film than
much of Christophe Honoré's output to date, although it is still
just as truthful and uncompromising in its depiction of human
experience. The gay love affair is particularly well handled, and
beautifully portrayed by Louis Garrel and Grégoire
Leprince-Ringuet with sensitivity, ambiguity and restraint, avoiding
the tired clichés, prejudices and explicit excess that we find
elsewhere today. As ever, Honoré is well-served by his
immensely talented cast of actors, (with a particularly memorable turn
from the magnificent Ludivine Sagnier) - they succeed in making this
one of the most engaging and heartfelt of French romantic dramas in
recent years, a soulful poem to the eternal mysteries of love and desire.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Christophe Honoré film:
La Belle personne (2008)
Film Synopsis
Ismaël and Julie are a young couple living in Paris. To
spice up their ailing love life, they invite another young woman,
Alice, to share their bed. The arrangement works out well, until,
one day, Julie suddenly dies. Devastated by this loss,
Ismaël and Alice separate - the former mopes around Paris whilst
being taunted by Julie's older sister, the latter starts a new affair
with another man. As he struggles to come to terms with
Julie's death, Ismaël finds himself drawn into a gay relationship
with an uninhibited teenager...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.