Stars:
Jérémie Renier, Louise Monot, Bruno TodeschiniStoryline
A young Jewish girl looking to escape the clutches of the Third Reich after seeing her parents and sister brutally slain while attempting to make their way to England is sheltered by an old friend whose status as a member of the "third" sex soon leads the Gestapo pounding on his door as well. Betrayed by a smuggler who sat idly by as her family was casually slaughtered by the SS, terrified Sara flees into the comforting care of childhood summer-vacation chum Jean and his faithful lover Philippe. Though safe for the moment thanks to Jean's quick-thinking plan to pass her off as a Gallic employee of his family's laundry business, Sara watches in horror as her homosexual protector is forced into a Nazi labor camp as a tragic result of a bad decision made by Jean's troublesome brother Jacques.User Reviews
An Impossible for HollywoodThis is the second time
I vote 10 for a film. I couldn't give it 20, but I would. An extremely
rare film. Everyone has already went through explanations about its
contents. I will go through something different.
The script is
just impossible. Maybe one of the best things I've ever seen. It blows
your mind away. It's absolutely brilliant. No gaps. No fissures. No dead
ends. As thoroughly crafted as any Shakespearian play. More acts than
in any Bergman's film. Every character depicted with their innermost
desires, thoughts and emptiness.
I'm still crying, and I don't
know why I can't stop. only real episodes of our absurdly grim history
in the news have made me cry because they move moral fibres that I try
not to touch, but reality does.
The Hamlet-like play evolves with
such a tension, that there are moment when your body engages in the
same reeling provoked in your mind. Attention to every small detail has
been paid so nothing is left to imagination. The crudeness of the story
clashes with the subtlety and perfection of the shooting. Transferred to
film, the focus on making you fall inside the spiral of the story is
completely intended.
There are no limits regarding directorial
skills, acting prowess, costumes, camera angles, colour... a perfect
brocade that reminds me of nothing I've ever seen. Maybe we could say
that Nicholas and Alexandra was one of those films that tell a story
with sheer brutality, and where nothing is taken for granted. Maybe
there are others.
I've seen more than 1,500 films in my life. I
have memories from a very early age of most of them. But I can't say why
this film made me re-think what I teach and what I think about
cinematography... and about life.
The violence never goes over
the top, but it surpasses any violence I've seen in war films. The issue
of love surpasses anything I've ever seen in any romance or read in any
novel. The cruelty, the passion, but especially the immense tension
that grips you from the very start borders the insane. If there is a
film that goes all the way to tell a story, this is the one. Maybe Fanny
och Alexander would be the other of the 1,500 I've seen.
Epic in
proportions. Epic in the perfect period atmosphere. Epic in its story
telling. Epic in resources, both human and material. Epic in a cast that
can ask no more from each and every one who took even a small role in
the film. Epic in the way it takes your mind and spirit in the most
dangerous roller-coaster.
If there's something you could try some
day -if you dare, and IF you can, is to analise the way this film was
photographed. I usually praise Vittorio Stroraro's work. This film takes
advantage of all available techniques in cinematography, but it keeps
the traditional, organic, unfiltered reality at face value. Not a small
achievement these days.
Again, French cinema is leading the world
with stories that make you think, live, feel the crude and sad reality.
Not a film for someone with any kind of heart condition or queasy
stomach. No horror film can make you feel like this one. This is a film
that was never intended to be classified as horror. But you'll meet one
of the most horrifying experiences ever. A master piece of art.
If,
when the credits start to roll, you don't feel like you're alone and
miserable, the last captions will do their work. Believe me, its a
roller-coaster that ends in a vertical freefall.
I apologise for using so many superlatives. I couldn't refrain myself.
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