The No.1 film in France for 4 weeks cheered by over 5 million
viewers
AWARDS:
Berlin International Film Festival - Nominated for Golden Berlin
Bear
In French with English Subtitles
Genre: Biography/Drama/Music
Director: Olivier Dahan
Cast: Marion Cotillard (“A Good Year”,
“Big Fish”, “A Very Long Engagement”,
“Love Me If You Dare”), Sylvie Testud, Gerard Depardieu,
Jean Paul Rouve, Emmanuelle Seigner
RunTime: 2 hrs 20 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films & Festive
Films
Rating: NC-16 (Brief nudity and some drug references)
Official Website: http://www.festivefilms.com/lavieenrose/main.htm
THE LA VIE
EN ROSE OFFICIAL SOUNDTRACK REVIEW
Opening Day: 26 July 2007
Synopsis:
From the slums of Paris to the limelight of New York, Edith
Piaf’s life was a battle to sing and survive, live and
love. Raised in poverty, Edith’s magical voice and her
passionate romances and friendships with the greatest names
of the period - Marlene Dietrich, Yves Montand and others-
made her a star all around the world. The true story of her
incredible destiny opens a window onto the artist’s
soul and into a woman’s heart.
Movie Review:
Within Olivier Dahan’s “La Vie En Rose”
is a pulsating centre of flighty ambitions and emotional veracity,
traits most biopics veer towards but hardly ever achieve due
to sheer aggrandising and bromidic posturing. But with Edith
Piaf, a film any less operatic would be a disservice to a
story as wrenching and gripping as one of the most revered
starlets of hers and our time.
As
with most performances dealing with a person living or dead,
allowances need to be taken with each of them in order to
astute whether these performances are merely approximated
imitations or studies of calculated poise with an emphasis
on striking the right notes to reveal something more than
just the particulars. It’s made all the more harder
to distinguish when we’re inundated with casual hyperbole
that pervades a cultural aptitude to associate a fantastic
performance with middling films just contented enough to revolve
around it. While an awesome performance makes a film good,
it does not necessarily make it great.
There’s
no possible way not to admire Marion Cotillard’s career-defining
turn as Edith Piaf, already in the process of being made a
central reason for the film to exist. But “La Vie En
Rose” is much more than just a brilliant perfomance
of a woman so singular in being. It is a rarity among biopics
with an intuitiveness to relent more than just a rehash of
the inextricably linked truisms of addiction, talent and tragedy
but has a creative fecundity to sanctify the cruel defiance
of a woman quite sustained in her sadness through a poignant
apogee that beseeched nothing more than appreciation.
Piaf
was never more incandescent than she was performing, and Dahan
dutifully evocates her music as an extension of her life with
each word significant to song and person. And representing
the timeless quality of her music, a storytelling method that
eschews standard chronology by gliding across the many defining
moments of her ravaged existence is told through a fluid screenplay
that understands and values the conventions (childhood turmoil,
adult adversity and eventual triumph) of a blockbuster biopic.
“La
Vie En Rose” remains truly elegant from start to end
with a design that closely approaches transcendence of structure
by constraining the minute facts and circumstances (if you
need the details, go to Wikipedia) of the iconoclastic chanteuse
by beautifully embodying her bewilderment and melancholy with
staggering grace and compassion that to truly acknowledge
her life is to be blessed with her fragile humanity.
Movie Rating:
(Romanticised
but grounded with a potent realisation of its subject)
Review by Justin Deimen
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