Film Review
After his brief and totally unexpected excursion into childhood fantasy
with
L'Avion (2005), director
Cédric Kahn returns to terra firma with a bang in his latest
film, an intense romantic drama which combines the overt eroticism of
his earlier
L'Ennui (1998) with the eerie
Hitchcockian feel of his
Feux rouges (2004). On
paper,
Les Regrets is a banal
story of rekindled passion involving two slightly pathetic souls
who, having gone their separate ways after an adolescent fling, cannot
resist having a second bite of the cherry in middle-age. The film
would have been a pretty bland affair were it not for Kahn's
distinctive thriller-esque mise-en-scène, which brings a
visceral edge to the proceedings, and the remarkable performances from
his lead actors, Yvan Attal and Valeria Bruni Tedeschi.
If there is a running theme to Kahn's increasingly diverse oeuvre it is
the perversity of human nature. This is perhaps most apparent in
Bar
des rails (1991) and
L'Ennui,
where the central characters pursue sexual adventures almost in spite
of themselves, as an instinctive reaction to the traumas of adolescence
and mid-life crisis. In
Les
Regrets, the main characters pursue a similarly perverse
romantic liaison, one that is propelled not by genuine love but by an
attempt to recapture the past and live the life that has been
rejected. The woman, Maya, is visibly torn between two realities
- her present lacklustre life and an alternative in which she believes
she can relive the one true love of her life. Of course, this
dual existence cannot be sustained indefinitely and Maya will again
have to decide which path to follow, if either.
Kahn could hardly have chosen two better actors than Yvan Attal and
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi to play the introverted Mathieu and huskily
sensual Maya. Tedeschi is no stranger to this kind of role, the
fragile, slightly neurotic dreamer who has next to no control over her
dangerous passions and inevitably ends up looking like a martyr
dangling from the cross of thwarted desire. Attal is a more
surprising choice, better known for his more extrovert macho roles, but
proves to be a perfect complement to Tedeschi, mirroring her very
visible emotional conflict in a darker, more subtle way. More
than anything, it is the riveting performances from these two great
actors that makes
Les Regrets
Cédric Kahn's most intense, most cruel and most moving film to
date.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Cédric Kahn film:
Une vie meilleure (2012)
Film Synopsis
Mathieu Lievin is a 40-year-old architect living in Paris. When
he learns that his mother has been hospitalised, he makes a hasty
return to the provincial town in which he grew up. In the street
he has a chance meeting with Maya, his childhood sweetheart whom he
hasn't seen for 15 years. She is accompanied by a man and a young
girl and says nothing to him. A few hours later, Maya telephones
Mathieu at his old family home and invites him to call on her.
Mathieu hesitates for a moment and then agrees to see her. Their
feelings for one another are as intense as ever, but surely it is too
late to start over again... ?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.