Film Review
53 years after
Un homme et une
femme (1966), his most celebrated and successful film, director Claude
Lelouch brings together that film's lead actors, Jean-Louis Trintignant and
Anouk Aimée, for an affectionate reunion that allows him to be pay
tribute to two icons of French cinema. Lelouch has good reason to look
back on his 1966 film. Considered by many to be the highpoint of his
incredibly productive career, this not only won the Palme d'or at the Festival
de Cannes in 1966, it also received two Oscars, a feat seldom achieved by
any French film.
Les Plus belles années d'une vie comes
three decades after an earlier sequel,
Un homme et une femme: Vingt ans
déjà, released in 1986, and completes a trilogy that Lelouch's
fans will no doubt cherish.
Claude Lelouch may be prolific but few would venture to call him subtle.
As you might expect, his reflection on
Un homme et une femme is a
characteristically flamboyant affair that is calculated to deliver the most
forceful of nostalgia rushes. As well as honouring his two favourite
actors, Lelouch intends his film to be a full-on celebration of love and
life and has the feel of a valedictory work, although, knowing Lelouch, he
will probably go on to make another thirty or so films before he finally
departs for the great film studio in the sky.
Les Plus belles années d'une vie interweaves poignant scenes
of Trintignant and Aimée, now in their late eighties but still captivating,
with excerpts from Lelouch's much-loved 1966 film and his 1976 short film
C'était un rendez-vous. The film plays the nostalgia card for
all it is worth, helped with music from his long-serving composer Francis
Lai (including the famous
chabadabada theme from
Un homme et une
femme).
In common with just about every film that Claude Lelouch has ever made, this
latest offering is shamelessly overdone, but on this occasion we can readily
forgive his self-indulgence. Jean-Louis Trintignant and Anouk Aimée
occupy such a pivotal place in the cinema experiences of so many people that
an adoring homage of this kind is entirely justified, even if the film is
totally lacking in narrative substance and relies too much on obvious emotionality
to gain our approval.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
It is more than half a century since Jean-Louis Duroc met the love of his
life, Anne Gauthier, when they both dropped their children off at a boarding
school in Deauville. At the time Duroc was an internationally renowned
racing driver, Anne a busy script-girl - both were struggling to get over
the premature deaths of their partners. Now in his late eighties, Duroc
is in a retirement home stricken with Alzheimer's disease. As contact
with the world around him slowly slips from his grasp, Duroc loses himself
in the maze of his memories. One name impresses itself on him: Anne
Gauthier. Believing that a re-acquaintance with Anne will benefit his
father's state of mind, Duroc's son Antoine sets out to find her and persuade
her to visit him. She too is now almost at the end of her life, but
she remembers her passionate love affair with Duroc as if it were only yesterday...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.