Product Description Catherine Breillat's dark and disturbing film about a May December romance that goes tragically awry ending in disastrous consequences .com Perfect Love begins with the reenactment of a violent crime. It then moves back in time to the evening, several months before, when 37-year-old mother and divorcée Frédérique (Isabelle Renauld in an accomplished performance) and 28-year-old man-about-town Christophe (Francois Renaud) first got together. For a while, the couple is able to make their unlikely union work, but then it all starts to unravel. There is no one incident, rather a series of petty jealousies and cruel comments. By the end, one of the two has murdered the other. As with her controversial 1999 feature, Romance, the title of author and director Catherine Breillat's 1996 predecessor isn't meant to be taken literally. If it's slightly less shocking and sexually explicit than 2001's acclaimed Fat Girl, it's just as disturbing and thought provoking and seems to suggest that an obsession with "perfect love" can only end in failure--if not death. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
A**R
A Director's Quiet but Passionate Scream
Perfect Love makes no attempt at keeping secrets. In just its opening minutes, the audience is given fragments of a murder investigation, the murderer re-enacting the crime, and a daughter's interview answers. These short introductory fragments give the audience the we-know-why-and-how-this-all-ends-so-badly information which, in turn, creates the framework for the story that follows i.e. "37 years old and twice divorced, Frédérique meets 28-year-old Christophe at a wedding. What starts as a happy relationship quickly turns tumultuous ..." (DVD cover notes). Sound simple and straightforward? Well, the viewing experience is not! If you can appreciate the subtlety in this movie of laughter as despair's final voice, then, you can appreciate the depth of analysis used to present the characters in this tale's distressing dénouement.The director's analytical approach creates the questions and answers that maintain and intensify the suspense; also, the director has crafted enough complex overlap and parallelism between characters to ensure an attentive viewing of this slow-paced, uncomfortable, claustrophobic, and un-natural "love story". In true French fashion, there is plenty of material for philosophical debate after viewing this movie. For example, psychologically transferred matricide (two-fold!), homosexual relationships finding strength from female abuse, desire as life denial, child abuse and the negative effects on children when parent(s) are absent either physically or emotionally, etc. ... Enough! The movie Perfect Love may become a cult classic at a later date; for now, its intelligence and artistry merit recognition and respect despite the angst its insightful vision engenders.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 weeks ago