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Title: La Captive |
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Genre: Drama |
Release Date: , 2000 |
MPAA Rating: n/a |
Runtime: 118 minutes |
Director: Chantal Akerman |
Writer: Chantal Akerman and Eric De Kuyper |
Distributor: Gémini Films |
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Rogue's Review:"La Captive" is....captivating
Having recently discovered French actress Sylvie Testud when I saw "The Chateau", I was interested in this film because she's in it.
I haven't read the story (Proust's "La Prisoniere" ~ book five of "Remembrance of Things Past") that the film is based on so I had nothing to compare it to when I saw it and therefore I went in without any preconceived notions. And with a film like this, a film that doesn't operate on any conventional filmmaking level, that is a very good thing.
This movie doesn't try to tell you what to think or feel about its characters; there is none of the contrivances so common in American movies, none of the manipulation. It just simply presents them and follows them and allows them to do what they do without the camera cutting away too soon for fear that the audience will get bored when there's not a lot "going on" in a scene - in fact some of the best scenes in the film have hardly any movement at all. And this is not done in a self-conscious, 'arty' let's-create-mood sort of way, which makes watching it - or rather experiencing it - even more hypnotic.
This is a film that must be experienced more than once, I would say: you're not really sure what's transpired or how you feel about what you've witnessed upon a first viewing because it doesn't hit all the 'buttons' that a commercial film is compelled to hit. And Testud is brilliant, managing to imply complexity without demonstrating it (if that makes sense) - she's beyond subtle, beyond sublime.
This is a film that must be experienced more than once, I would say: you're not really sure what's transpired OR how you feel about what you've witnessed upon a first viewing because it doesn't hit all the 'buttons' that a commercial film is compelled to hit. And Testud is brilliant, managing to imply complexity without demonstrating it (if that makes sense) - she's beyond subtle, beyond sublime.
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