Discover
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Alain Attal
Producer -
Nicole Garcia
Director -
Daniel Pemberton
Original Music Composer -
Natalie Carter
Co-Writer -
Catherine Leterrier
Costume Design -
Stéphanie Guillon
Makeup Artist -
Cécile Deleu
Set Decoration -
Arnaud de Moléron
Production Design
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CinemaSerf 4/12/2024 7:23:28 AM
From an early age, "Gabrielle" (Marion Cotillard) has shown a bit of a rebellious spirit. As a girl, she was determined not to obey her parental wish to marry the local "Jose" (a subtly nuanced effort from Alex Brendemühl) - even though he was quite fond of her, and as a result she lived in the semi-seclusion that befitted an unwed girl in rural France. Her "break" comes in the unlikely form of some kidney stones that necessitates a trip to an Alpine hospital. It's here that she encounters the recovering "André" (Louis Garrel) who has just returned from French Indochina shell-shocked and badly wounded. There's a little of a Wildred Owen poem to this drama, I thought. It shows us the results of the horrors of war, the after effects and trauma, but there's also a degree of hope and optimism as their love story takes shape and maybe, just maybe, there's scope for contentment somewhere. Cotillard is on solid form as the rather self-obsessed and just a bit flaky "Gabrielle" and though Garrel doesn't have so much to do, he still comes across convincingly as a soldier conflicted by a reality and a dream - it's that conclusion that is quite a touching affair, and causes us to have a think about just who "Gabrielle" actually is. The film looks good and is well scored by Daniel Pemberton which all gives a certain lustre to Cotillard's portrayal of a woman I don't think I'd have liked very much.
Marion Cotillard
GabrielleLouis Garrel
André SauvageVictoire du Bois
JeannineÀlex Brendemühl
JoséBrigitte Roüan
AdéleMichelle Goddet
Un médecinVictor Quilichini
Marc - 14 ansAloïse Sauvage
Agostine