Film Review
Romain Duris gets in touch with his feminine side (and seems to enjoy
it just a little too much...) in this latest over-seasoned
genre-flitting potpourri from France's least predictable and most
likeably scurrilous filmmaker, François Ozon. Taking his
cue from a Ruth Rendell short story entitled
The New Girl Friend, Ozon crafts
another cutely weird fairytale that rips open the all-too pristine
carcass of bourgeois conformity to expose the festering morass of dark
leanings and repressed desires that lie within.
Une nouvelle amie is a fair
approximation to what we would expect to get if Pedro Almodóvar
was minded to attempt a remake of Hitchcock's
Vertigo
- a darkly comedic gender-bending study in identity that convinces us
that we'd all be better off if we traded in the lad's mags for mascara
and began to nurture the female side of our nature.
The film begins as an overblown tribute to the director who has
probably had most influence on Ozon, Douglas Sirk. The laughably
fustian writing and mise-en-scene, inflated to ludicrous proportions by
some extravagant camera work, mawkish acting and a ridiculously
overdone score, thrusts us into the soppy midsts of a classic American
soap, but like Sirk, Ozon appropriates this elaborate artifice only so
that he can later tear it apart like confetti and reveal the deeper
realities of life that lie beneath. Once, like the characters in
a children's fantasy, we have passed through the 'magic door' (as the
heroine does ten minutes into the film) we enter a completely different
realm - one where synthetic sentiment is suddenly kicked down a
mineshaft and genuine human desires and impulses take over.
Welcome to Ozon's world.
Even before we get to this point we know that the two main characters
David and Claire (portrayed with surprising subtlety by Romain
Duris and Anaïs Demoustier) are bound to become romantically
entwined. But what Ozon serves up is poles apart from the
conventional unfaithful wife scenario.
Un(e) nouvel(le) ami(e) - which is
how the film should have been titled - turns out to be a bold and
perceptive exploration of gender identity, in which both of the main
characters are revitalised by a willingness to embrace the feminine
side of their persona. Claire is initially drawn to David not by
the idea of romance but to find a friend to replace the one she has
lost. Once Claire has got over the initial shock of seeing him
made up as a woman, David's willingness to dress up in women's
clothing helps to restore the equilibrium in her life.
Cross-dressing also turns out to be a vital therapy for David, allowing
him to keep alive the memory of the woman who was taken from him in
such tragic circumstances. David and Claire becomes substitutes
for the dead woman in each other's eyes, and as a result both are
revived and transformed for the better by an awareness of their own
innate femininity. It's no crime to be a woman, even in 2014.
The perverse fairytale shifts into darker, more noticeably
Hitchcockian, territory in its later passages as the happily feminised
protagonists come up against the ugly macho tendencies of the real
world. Raphaël Personnazs' Gilles, the jealous husband,
epitomises the latter and makes an effective contrast with the other
two principal characters, although Ozon (being Ozon) soon has us
wondering whether Gilles isn't himself susceptible to some slight
deviations from the perpendicular. Ambiguity is piled upon
ambiguity as the film screeches towards its typically Ozon-esque grande
finale, with a dream sequence that takes us even deeper into the
labyrinth of subconscious desires.
Une nouvelle amie is as engaging
and subtly subversive as any previous film made by François Ozon
but it feels curiously unfinished, as if several pieces of the jigsaw
have been lost along the way. The tidy resolution of Rendell's
original story is substituted for something far more opaque and
perplexing, but whilst we may quibble about the lack of a neat ending,
the film is one that can hardly fail to grab your attention.
Slick and ballsy, in a feminine sort of way, this has to be
Ozon's most committed study in identity to date.
© James Travers 2014
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Next François Ozon film:
Frantz (2016)
Film Synopsis
A comfortably situated housewife, Claire falls into a deep
depression when her best friend, Laura, is struck down by a terminal
illness. After her friend's death, Claire finds herself drawn to
Laura's widowed husband, David, who is left to bring up their baby
daughter alone. One day, Claire makes an impromptu call on David
at his home and is horrified to find him dressed up as a woman in
Laura's clothes. David confesses that before he married he had
cross-dressing tendencies and after his wife's death he has resumed the
habit to help ease the pain of his bereavement. This bizarre
revelation helps to cement Claire and David's friendship and they both
discover a new lease of life, with David more than willing to play a
girlfriend substitute for Laura. Claire's husband Gilles soon
notices the dramatic transformation in his wife and begins to suspect
she may be having an affair...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.