Genre: Drama
Director: Laurent Tirard
Cast: Romain Duris, Fabrice Luchini, Laura
Morante, Edouard Baer, Ludivine Sagnier, Fanny Valette
RunTime: 2 hrs
Released By: The Picturehouse
Rating: NC-16
Official Website: www.moliere-lefilm.com
Opening Day: 18 October 2007
Synopsis:
This witty romantic period drama tells the story from which
Molière would emerge as France's greatest dramatist.
At the age of 22, following a spell of imprisonment for debt,
Molière - a well-born young man who had abandoned his
privileges of his birth for love of a woman and the theatre
- disappeared without a trace. His reappearance, several months
later, launches his troupe into touring the provinces of France
- a tour that goes on to last for 13 years and culminates
in Moliere's triumphant return to Paris.
Movie Review:
Laurent Tirard’s costume comedy “Molière”
finds comparison with “Shakespeare in Love” rather
easily, and perhaps most dauntingly, to its legendary subject’s
own durable narratives. But while there’s not as much
details missing from the 17th-century French playwright Moliere's
(Romain Duris) life as there was in Shakespeare’s, there’s
still ample room for a fanciful imagination and conjecture.
The
window is small, for Tirard and co-writer Grégoire
Vigneron to present the missing weeks of Molière’s
life after his brief imprisonment for not paying his debts,
just before he embarked with his troupe on a 13-year tour
of the French provinces before his triumphant return to the
theatre scene in Paris. The driving point in this film, as
it was in “Shakespeare in Love”, is how great
art tends to imitate life and how muses tend to stem from
elaborate romances, which in this case is Molière’s
torrid affair with the wealthy Monsieur Jourdain’s (Fabrice
Luchini) wife Elmire (an enthralling Laura Morante).
Tirard’s
first salvo and indeed the one that sustains its premise throughout
the end, is his understanding that a film about Molière
has to be a farce, an important element that shapes his later
and most important works when romance, gender politics and
the moral bankruptcy of the French aristocracy become his
staples. As a staunch tragedian, he gets an early education
in the deviancy of the social class from the misguidedly smitten
Jourdain who picks him out from his cell to help him perfect
his self-written play to impress the blueblood snob, Célimene
(Ludivine Sagnier). But “Molière”, for
all its charm and spirited performances does play rather loose
in its opening hour, setting up the strands to be tangled
in its second half. The modern transposition of the ringing
hypocrisy of the rapacious upper class and eager capitalists
ingratiating themselves into a privileged circle offers up
its most scintillating prospects.
Nonetheless,
flawed in his initial insistence of tragedy as the spirit
of true art, it would seem that while Molière’s
life is a stage, he’s not yet in on the act. Duris plays
his character with an insinuating intelligence, cynically
wearing a scowl on his face but a twinkle of hope in his eyes,
all with a precise intensity that threatens to spill over.
A hard sell for a light comedy bordering on fluff, but Molière
plays the crucial role of the straight man in his own farce.
There’s no sombre reverence to Molière and his
work, though the film hints at the genesis of his later plays
through overtly familiar circumstances, making it a more fruitful
experience for those intimate with his works.
Movie Rating:
(A clever little romantic comedy that might not suggest
the best of Molière but still splendidly entertaining)
Review by Justin Deimen
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