Status
Released
original language
fr
Budget
$ 10300000
Revenue
$ 47748
Gabrielle
André Sauvage
José
Adéle
Jeannine
Agostine
La secrétaire de la cure
Blaise
Martin
Marc Rabascal à 7 ans
Marc - 14 ans
Paco
Julio
Georget
Simon
La femme de Simon
Camilo
Un garçon à la fête
René
L'employée de la cure
Le professeur de piano
Un client de José
Le chauffeur de taxi
L'instituteur
Le médecin de la cure
Un médecin
L'infirmière de la maternité
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2024-04-12
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.