Here’s
a film that does what the French do best onscreen: talk –
about love and sex and relationships. And it does it simply and
cleverly, with great charm.
The film is
also something of a feat: It was made in 2004 in only 10 days with
two video cameras and a microphone, using actors who had no cinema
experience. The actors and director rehearsed for six days, then
the film was shot in only four.
That exercise
in the art of acting was seen a couple of years later by Claude
Lelouch, who decided to produce it, thus saving a little gem from
oblivion.
Given the
technical constraints, the film is completely devoid of flashy effects,
but the scenario is as complex as the cinematography and sound are
simple. It tells the story of six couples, with each vignette featuring
one of them linked to the next by one individual, forming a chain
that connects in the end: Camille is having an affair with Christian,
who is married to Caroline, who is sexually humiliated by a job
interviewer, who is in love with a prostitute, and so on.
The pace is
slow, with many silences, but the exposition of the joys and sorrows
of relationships and of the games played by lovers and sexual partners
is so true and the acting so perfectly tuned that you leave the
cinema feeling refreshed and informed – if not exactly hopeful
about the enduring nature of love.
Heidi
Ellison
© 2007
Paris Update
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