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agatha116
Reviews
5x2 (2004)
Like psychoanalysis? Watch this!
This film was again a revelation. As with other Francois Ozon films, the tag-line/synopsis didn't make me go "Must See", but the actual viewing experience was one of the most exciting of the year - tense, sexy, and with complex, convincing characters.
I was particularly captivated by Stephane Freiss's apparently nasty Gilles, the brooding, darkly handsome husband, who (in the reverse sequence of the film) rapes the distressed Marion after their divorce, purposely embarrasses her in front of their dinner guests, and fails to turn up for the birth of their child. I found myself intrigued by questions the film doesn't seem to answer: why is he like this, and why does she seem to forgive him so much before finally cutting her losses at the very end? I see this film as a superbly crafted and performed psychological puzzle with some major pieces missing. What you make of the whole picture is left to your imagination, ingenuity, and maybe which character's faults you are more disposed to understand... I don't know if this was the director's intension, but I certainly had great fun boring everyone with my 'solution', which suddenly struck me afterwards in the LOGO... It's also one of those rare films I can't wait to see again!
La fille de Keltoum (2001)
I thoroughly enjoyed it!
Riveting and moving, this is a culture clash road-movie with shades of both 'Thelma & Louise' and 'Rabbit Proof Fence'.
Rallia, a young North African brought up in Switzerland by adoptive parents, arrives in the country of her birth to find Keltoum, the woman she believes abandoned her as a baby.
In the mountainous desert where the bus driver drops her, she first encounters members of her family: a gentle old man, her grandfather, and a terrified woman who turns out to be her mother's sister. But Keltoum herself remains elusive. Working in a luxury hotel in the city, she supposedly visits every week.
Rallia begins to take part in her new-found family's life. Her initially circumspect aunt becomes a companion, and accompanying her on her water rounds is a revelation.
But Rallia waits in vain for her mother to arrive and, feeling betrayed by her family's lies, decides to leave and look for her. On impulse she encourages her aunt to join her, and the two set off on a trip full of danger, adventure and a rather steep learning curve.
Having grown up taking European wealth and freedom for granted, it comes as a shock to Rallia (and the 'Western' viewer) when she experiences life in the raw: highway robbery in aid of basic survival, childbirth on a rocky outcrop, a woman being abandoned by her husband on the roadside, male violence towards a girl wearing make-up. And when she finally confronts her mother, she is in for a deeply cathartic lesson in humility.
Yet there are also moments of great empowerment when her European self-confidence allows her to take the bull by the horns, so to say.
I found KELTOUM'S DAUGHTER full of fascinating insight into North African culture, custom and costume while being kept on the edge of my seat by a riveting adventure and moved by a tale of personal discovery. I thoroughly enjoyed it!