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San Sebastian 2005
A French Affair
By Julio Feo Zarandieta
A well-established film director, Anne Fontaine, and a
young filmmaker, Stéphane Brizé, did an excellent job of
representing French cinema in the official competition of the 53rd edition
of the San Sebastian International Film Festival. They produced two quality
films whose common denominator was a penchant for intimate human drama,
stellar performances, and the skilful directing of actors as they construct
their characters. In His Hands (Entre ses mains), Anne Fontaine's
seventh film, and Not Here to Be Loved (Je
ne suis pas là pour être
aimé),
directed by Stéphane Brizé, both speak to us of feelings,
human relationships, and families, but each through a very different
story.
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Anne
Fontaine, award-winner many times over, (1993 Jean Vigo Prize for Love
Affairs Usually End Badly (Les histoires
d'amour finissent mal... en général),
Best Screenplay at Venice for Dry Cleaning (Nettoyage à sec),
Cesar for Best Actor Michel Bouquet in My Father and I (Comment
j’ai
tué mon
père), is now back with In His Hands. The story
explores the relationship between a bored woman and a strangely seductive
veterinarian for whom she feels an ambiguous attraction and fascination.
Conceived as an intimate thriller, the film is told from the point
of view of the two protagonists, brilliantly played by Belgian actor
Benoît
Poelvoorde and French actress Isabelle Carré.
While Anne Fontaine's film is an adaptation of the Dominique
Barbéris' novel Les kangourous, Stéphane Brizé's
work is based on an original screenplay which revolves around relationships
between parents and their children, and between couples. The intimate
story is also supported by the strength of its leading actors: Anne Consigny,
Patrick Chesnais and Georges Wilson. A story of frustration, loneliness
and hope, a story of love whose underlying thread is a mutual attraction
surrounded by the sensuality of tango, music and dance.
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The character played by Patrick Chesnais is a kind of
anti-hero, a court clerk frustrated with his job, his family, and his
love life, a man whose pathetic life is reminiscent of a Georges Simenon
novel. Patrick Chesnais plays a sad, taciturn, grey, introverted man,
not unlike Monsieur Hire, who with the eye of a voyeur indiscreetly looks
through the window at the tango classes in the building next door. Anne
Consigny does a brilliant job in immediately making us believe in the
attraction she feels toward the two characters. Veteran actor Georges
Wilson gives a superb performance in the role of a sickly, authoritarian
and grumpy father, angry with everything and everyone.
It's a shame that the International Jury did not select
any of these actors for awards, since all of them deserved to be on the
list of prize winners. The two French films in competition were praised
by reviewers and audiences alike in San Sebastian, and although they
were left out of the awards, they do demonstrate the energy and drive
of French cinema today. Also represented in the festival's parallel sections,
this energy could be seen in such excellent films as Holy Lola by
Bertrand Tavernier, Burnt Out (Sauf le respect que je vous
dois) by Fabienne Godet, Heading South (Vers
le sud) by
Laurent Cantet, and Hell (L'enfer) by
Danis Tanovic, as well as some fifteen co-productions with different
countries from Europe to Latin America.
Julio Feo Zarandieta
© FIPRESCI 2005
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