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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
A Very Long Engagement (2004,
Jean-Pierre Jeunet)
So many movies this year have ripped my heart
out and then put it back together again in new
and creative ways, that to say that this is the
third-best movie in that vein this year doesn't
do it justice. A Very Long Engagement is
a beautifully heartwrenching story about love,
hope, and the absurdity of war, by the creator
of Amelie.
Jean-Pierre Jeunet is a creator of worlds, and
here he applies this talent to World War 1-era
France, where Mathilde (Audrey Tautou, the famed
Amelie herself) and Manech (the heartbreakingly
lovely Gaspard Ulliel) are engaged to be married.
Manech is drafted and sent to fight, and when
he is driven to the edge by the horrors of war,
he tries to escape--and is sentenced to die for
self-mutilation. Mathilde refuses to believe that
he is dead, and sets off on an odyssey to find
him. Her journey leads her across France, on the
tail of an officer-murdering prostitute, a carpenter
with German boots, and a presidential pardon.
This movie is almost the anti-Cold Mountain,
with the woman's quest to find her man at its
heart rather than the soldier's attempt to return
to his lover. Tautou is a stubbornly winsome heroine
unafraid to use whatever means necessary to find
her man, and Ulliel is the damsel in distress,
beloved by everyone who sees him. Again, the soldier
at the heart of the film is tormented by the horrors
of war and its fundamental meaninglessness, and
attempts to return to what does matter: his love.
What makes this film so good is its combination
of Amelie-style whimsy, City of Lost
Children-esque industrial bleakness, and
a very human, timely premise. The sepia-toned
photography, fanciful costumes and settings, and
quirky characters keep the film from becoming
melodramatic, but the performances of the actors
keep the movie emotionally resonant. It will make
you laugh, cry, and step through the screen and
into its world.
Sarah Jaffe, December 17, 2004
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