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Berlin Reviews: Lady Jane

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  • Berlin Reviews: Lady Jane

    LADY JANE

    Variety
    http://www.variety.com/index.asp?lay out=festivals&jump=review&id=2478&revi ewid=VE1117936207
    Feb 14 2008
    CA

    An Agat Films & Cie, France 3 Cinema co-production, with the
    participation of Canal Plus, Cinecinema, with the support of La Region
    Provence Alpes Cote D'Azur, in association with Le Centre National
    de la Cinematographie, Poste Image, Soficinema 3.

    (International sales: Films Distribution, Paris.) Produced, directed
    by Robert Guediguian. Screenplay, Jean-Louis Milesi, Guediguian.

    With: Ariane Ascaride, Jean-Pierre Darroussin, Gerard Meylan, Yann
    Tregouet, Frederique Bonnal, Jacques Boudet.

    By RUSSELL EDWARDS

    Violence begets violence and pat homilies in crimer-cum-morality
    tale "Lady Jane," from earthy French helmer Robert Guediguian. After
    previous efforts "The Journey to Armenia" and "The Last Mitterand,"
    which took him onto a broader canvas, helmer returns to the gritty
    Marseilles milieu that informed much of his earlier work. Thriller
    aspect will likely alienate his fan base outside Gaul, and
    international crime buffs will find the yarn too convenient and
    unconvincing. Within France, however, combination of esteemed helmer
    and noirish flavor is likely to find wide acceptance on April 2008
    release.

    Pic begins with three masked figures passing out free fur coats
    in a Marseilles whorehouse while the soundtrack pumps rebelliously
    jaunty electronic-blues music. Story then jumps to shopkeeper Muriel
    (Ariane Ascaride) tending to a customer in a perfumerie whose moniker,
    Lady Jane, matches a cannabis-leafed tattoo on her wrist. Mid-sale,
    Muriel receives a distressing phone call in which, due to cell-phone
    technology, she can see that her teenage son is being held at gunpoint.

    Upset but outwardly cool, Muriel gets together with her old pals,
    shipwright Francois (Jean-Pierre Darroussin) and strip-club owner Rene
    (Gerard Meylan), who agree to help her raise the requested ransom.

    Gradually, both Francois and Rene show evidence of a criminal past,
    and a flashback confirms the three middle-aged protags were the masked
    Robin Hoods in the film's opening. Flashback climaxes with Muriel
    revealing her tattoo to their victim, who was obviously chosen to
    settle a score, before spitefully executing him.

    Link between the killing and the kidnapping is not apparent at
    first, but when the exchange of Muriel's son for the ransom goes
    startlingly awry, the connection becomes prematurely obvious. Earlier
    taut narrative becomes blatantly schematic, and pic morphs into a
    tut-tutting riposte to the sadistic (and more convincing) fatalism
    of Michael Haneke's "Cache". Matched with a ham-fisted resentment of
    modern technology, the lecturing tone underlines the suspicion that
    Guediguian's film is too narrowly partisan in all its arguments.

    Perfs by helmer's regular ensemble players Ascaride, Darroussin
    and Meylan impress in their emotional scenes and their onscreen
    familiarity perfectly projects longtime camaraderie. However, only
    the crumple-faced Darroussin is successfully reborn an aging survivor
    from a Jean-Pierre Melville crimer.

    For a director unaccustomed to thrillers, the action sequences are
    well helmed. Fuzzy lensing gives pic a semi-romanticized, somewhat
    amateurish hue. Soundtrack eclectically swings from blues to classical
    and contempo French pop, but is smartly placed. All other tech credits
    are pro.

    Camera (color), Pierre Milon; editor, Bernard Sasia; production
    designer, Michel Vandestien; sound (Dolby), Laurent Lafran. Reviewed at
    Berlin Film Festival (competing), Feb. 12, 2008. Running time: 102 MIN.
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