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  • Young director has drama all sewn up

    Barking and Dagenham Post, UK
    May 20 2005

    Young director has drama all sewn up

    20 May 2005
    A COMMON THREAD
    (Les Brodeuses)
    Director: éléonore Faucher
    Starring: Lola Naymark, Ariane Ascaride
    French with English
    sub-titles
    89 mins, 12A
    ***

    An unmarried country girl becomes pregnant with an unwanted child.
    Not a novel dish - but one beautifully treated in a sensitive film
    distinguished by fine acting and admirable photography.

    This is the first feature of the young French director, éléonore
    Faucher, and it is a good one. A miniature, though perhaps not
    Tolstoy, it would hold its own with Mrs Gaskell.

    At first its tone is rough, unpleasant. Claire (exceptionally
    well-played by Lola Naymark), is the red-haired farmer's daughter
    from a village in deepest France who becomes pregnant. The father
    does not want to know. She takes a job in a supermarket.

    Everyone is objectionable. Her parents are objectionable to each
    other, her mother is objectionable to her, she is objectionable to
    her younger brother.

    Claire is examined by a doctor and angrily declares that she wants to
    bear the child anonymously and then give it away. She leaves the
    supermarket and seeks work with Mme Mélikian, an Armenian lady (again
    exceptionally well played by Ariane Ascaride), who embroiders for the
    haute couture designer Christian Lacroix.

    Mme Mélikian is depressed because her son has died - and very
    suspicious. But eventually she agrees to Claire's coming to embroider
    in her workshop.

    The heart and strength of the film is the development of the
    initially difficult relationship between Claire and the much older
    woman.

    Claire is kind to Mme Mélikian and eventually accepts an invitation
    to move in. Her anger disappears and, through their contentment with
    each other, she, in effect, achieves a state of grace.

    It is a very practical film. You can learn how to harvest cabbages,
    embroider with an old sewing machine, conduct an obstetric
    examination, open up a portable radio, take a hook out of a fish's
    mouth, make dolmades, and get laid when six-months' pregnant.

    But the best thing of all is the acting of the two leading ladies,
    totally different in style.

    Naymark is young, open, pro-active, and her attractive face is
    continuously responsive to change.

    Ascaride's face is of a damaged soul, sometimes hard, sometimes
    without hope.

    But when she smiles, you smile with her. Made-up for a visit to
    Paris, she is impressive. For she has style - the sort of style which
    one sometimes sees in Russian ballerinas of a certain age.

    --Boundary_(ID_RpOnGuyFc8DcFSvCXVckGg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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