Film Review
Catherine Corsini's follow-up to her acclaimed 2015 drama
La Belle saison, a devastatingly
true-to-life account of a lesbian love affair, is another similarly intense
portrayal of enduring love, this time between a mother and daughter whose
lives are both blighted by the same odious self-regarding male.
Un
amour impossible is adapted from a novel of the same title by Christine
Angot, one of a series of books in which the best-selling author draws on
her own life experiences to construct some powerfully moving explorations
of the human psyche. Angot's well-developed appreciation of the fragility
and resilience of the female spirit is much in evidence in the film she recently
scripted with Claire Denis,
Un
beau soleil intérieur (2017).
In adapting Angot's dense and complex novel, which covers a period of fifty
years in the lives of its protagonists, Corsini and her co-screenwriter Laurette
Polmanss certainly had their work cut out. By taking too literary an
approach (which is overly reliant on a voiceover narration)
the film fails to have the dramatic impact that it might have done
with a looser, less slavishly faithful, adaptation. Even so,
despite its reluctance to cut corners which results in a slightly daunting
135 minute run time,
Un amour impossible manages to be a compelling
piece of film drama that absolutely resonates with human feeling. With
its shocking depiction of a man taking advantage of the power he has over
the female protagonists the film chimes with contemporary outrage over male
exploitation of women.
The melodramatic plot looks as if it owes quite a lot to Thomas Hardy and
George Eliot. With its harrowing account of an immaculate young woman
succumbing to a good-for-nothing bounder from a higher social class, who
abandons her, leaves her with a child and then returns to reap even greater
havoc there are distinct shades of
Tess of the d'Urbervilles and
Adam
Bede. Rather than portray the female protagonists as mere victims
of male dominance, as was customary in most 19th century literature,
the film's authors take a more positive slant and show them to be the nobler
and more resilient sex, whilst their male tormentor, far from being the Übermensch
he thinks he is, is nothing more than a morally vacuous narcissist.
Such is the perverse nature of human desire that the most virtuous of women,
a hardworking Jewish girl named Rachel, ends up being irresistibly drawn
to the unworthiest of men, a self-loving bourgeois intellectual named Philippe.
Romantic intoxication is a splendid thing whilst it lasts, but when it is
time to wake up and nurse the hangover Rachel's folly becomes all too evident.
Even though he has put a good woman in the family way Philippe has no intention
of marrying such a lowly creature. He makes no attempt to conceal his
class prejudices and anti-Semitic feelings, and so he exits stage left and
leaves poor Rachel to bring up her little daughter alone. Rachel is
not one to give up easily on her dreams of conjugal felicity, so she devotes
herself to trying to coerce her lover into doing the decent thing by her.
When Philippe does finally return to her it is not a happy ending that he
brings but an even ghastlier demonstration of masculine thoughtlessness,
only this time it is Rachel's daughter Chantal who is on the receiving end.
On paper, all this sounds like pure soap - the stuff of 1930s melodrama.
What elevates it above this tawdry level and gives it a biting authenticity
are the extraordinarily vivid performances from the two lead actors, Virginie
Efira and Niels Schneider. In what is arguably her best dramatic performance
to date, Efira (a former Belgian television presenter) compels us to sympathise
with her somewhat naive character, an innocent who is violently led astray
by her romantic impulses to love a man who, whilst her superior in class
and education, is completely beneath her in moral and human terms.
The seductive charm that Niels Schneider exudes so effortlessly makes Rachel
appear less foolish than she might otherwise have done, but when Philippe's
true nature reveals itself Schneider has no difficulty painting him as the
vilest specimen of humanity to have walked the earth. We know that
Efira's pursuit of Schneider after he abandons her cannot end well, but what
ensues when he does return to her proves to be even more shocking than our
worst expectations.
The abject unsuitability of the pairing of two such contrasting characters
is driven home to great effect by the film's bold visual representation of
the world's they inhabit. The sunny pastoral landscape that is home
to Rachel speaks of her unspoiled idealistic nature, whilst the claustrophobic
urban maze that is Paris reflects the mean-spirited self-absorption of Philippe.
In the end it is not class or race that makes the love affair between Rachel
and Philippe impossible, it is their contrasting moral natures. Opposites
may attract, but that doesn't mean they should tie the connubial knot. Catherine
Corsini's latest remarkable film makes this point with a delicacy that is
almost heart-breaking.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Towards the end of the 1950s, Rachel is a modest office worker in her early
twenties who lives in the central French town of Châteauroux.
A romantic by nature, she feels she has found the man of her dreams in Philippe,
a handsome young intellectual from a better class of family than her own.
The latter, a self-adoring Parisian, is temporarily located in the region,
engaged on translation work for the military. An intense love affair
ensues, which results in Rachel becoming pregnant. Philippe has no
intention of marrying beneath him, so he abandons his lover, leaving her
to bring up her daughter Chantal alone. Rachel never gives up on her hope
that one day Philippe will return to her and assume paternity of the daughter
he walked away from. But when her former lover does come back to her
things do not take a turn for the better...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.