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	<title>Observer &#187; A Mother&#8217;s Courage in Marseilles Survives Loves and Woes</title>
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		<title>A Mother&#8217;s Courage in Marseilles Survives Loves and Woes</title>

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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Nov 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/11/a-mothers-courage-in-marseilles-survives-loves-and-woes/</link>
			<dc:creator>Andrew Sarris</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Robert Guédiguian's</p>
<p>The Town Is Quiet ( La Ville Est Tranquille ), from a</p>
<p>screenplay by Jean-Louis Wilesi and Mr. Guédiguian, penetrates into several tormentedly</p>
<p>interlocking lives in the city of Marseilles, while retaining a scenic</p>
<p>perspective on a deceptively peaceful cityscape. In the process, many of the</p>
<p>contemporary problems of the Western</p>
<p>world-racism, drugs, economic injustice, abortion and anti-abortion-are given</p>
<p>unforgettably human faces. One has almost forgotten that a mere movie</p>
<p>can deal with serious political and social issues without sloganizing or dehumanizing its characters.</p>
<p> Michèle (Ariane Ascaride) is a blond woman in her late 30's who is first seen working in a fish market in picturesque</p>
<p>fashion, tossing enormous fish from one watery venue to another. Her strenuous</p>
<p>labors in the market are nothing when compared to the stresses and strains</p>
<p>awaiting her at home. As she rides her motorbike from work across much of Marseilles,</p>
<p>she is on her way to becoming a recurring mobile figure in the teeming life of</p>
<p>the port city.</p>
<p> But at home, she is forced to confront a surly unemployed husband</p>
<p>on the dole; a promiscuous daughter, Fiona (Julie-Marie Pamantier),</p>
<p>hooked on heroin; and an infant granddaughter wailing fruitlessly for</p>
<p>nourishment until Michèle comes home and feeds the</p>
<p>child, without any help or even gratitude from the rest of her "family." As if</p>
<p>this is not enough of an ordeal, Michèle is soon</p>
<p>forced into the position of securing heroin for her bedridden addict of a</p>
<p>daughter and even injecting the heroin herself, because her daughter's hands</p>
<p>have become too shaky for the task. As Michèle</p>
<p>alternates between filling her granddaughter's bottle with nutrients and filling Fiona's veins with heroin,</p>
<p>she becomes a veritable Mother Courage of the fish markets.</p>
<p> One day, Michèle's</p>
<p>path crosses that of Paul (Jean-Pierre Darroussin),</p>
<p>an ex-dockworker who has betrayed his striking co-workers by accepting the firm's offer of</p>
<p>severance pay, with which he purchases a taxi. He encounters Michèle when she runs out of gas for her motorbike. He</p>
<p>gallantly siphons some fuel from his cab to help her get home and then follows</p>
<p>her, hoping to start a relationship.</p>
<p> At first, Michèle rejects Paul's</p>
<p>advances, but after a time, and when the need for her daughter's heroin becomes</p>
<p>truly desperate, Michèle prostitutes herself for Paul</p>
<p>and anyone else who is available. Her regular supplier is her childhood</p>
<p>sweetheart, Gérard (Gérard Meylan), who runs a small bar but has a sinister second</p>
<p>life. As the various characters enter the film, they introduce us to different</p>
<p>strata of society.</p>
<p> When Paul visits his retired</p>
<p>father and mother, he pretends that his business is going well and that he has found a serious</p>
<p>girlfriend. Actually, he has lost his cab license because of repeated meter</p>
<p>violations. He is thus stamped as a perpetual loser who lies to his parents,</p>
<p>and yet he ultimately emerges as a sympathetically supportive benefactor in Michèle's desperate life. (Paul's father happens to be a</p>
<p>disillusioned old Communist who can still sing every verse of "L'Internationale," which he does, and which marks the first</p>
<p>time I have ever heard it sung in its entirety).</p>
<p> An interracial subplot is provided by Viviane (Christine Brüches), a music teacher estranged from her womanizing,</p>
<p>pseudo-liberal, upper-class husband, and Abderamane (Alexandre Ogou), an idealistic</p>
<p>young North African, just out of prison, who is one of her former students. The</p>
<p>politics here are very explicit, but the rhetoric engulfs the characters before</p>
<p>they can be developed as distinctive individuals. The melodramatic dénouement</p>
<p>seems flimsily contrived in this area, despite some interesting political views</p>
<p>of the French anti-immigration movement.</p>
<p> By contrast, the abortion issue bleeds out of the deepest</p>
<p>feelings of Michèle and Gérard</p>
<p>in their unfolded past. And when Michèle finally</p>
<p>cracks from all the fearsome pressures beating down on her, she and her</p>
<p>daughter experience a moment of spiritual epiphany that is guaranteed to stop</p>
<p>viewers in their tracks as they contemplate the many faces of love all the way</p>
<p>to the grave.</p>
<p> Lynch in La-La Land</p>
<p> David Lynch's Mulholland Drive ,</p>
<p>from his own screenplay, is hanging around as one of the most controversial</p>
<p>films of the year, which is to say that half the people I talk to who have seen</p>
<p>it like it, and the other half dislike it or even hate it. Mr. Lynch's Mulholland  Drive</p>
<p>shared the directorial Grand Prix at Cannes along with Joel Coen's</p>
<p> The Man Who Wasn't There , and observers</p>
<p>on the scene shrugged off the direction of</p>
<p>both films, as well as the films themselves, despite the fact that both</p>
<p>directors have  cult</p>
<p>followings in Europe.</p>
<p> As it turned out, when I</p>
<p>finally saw the two films here, I liked them both, but in different ways. Mr. Coen's film has a beginning, middle and end, while Mr. Lynch's work is really two different films tacked together</p>
<p>with many of the same actors and characters marching off in different</p>
<p>directions. The explanation for Mr. Lynch's nonlinearity is quite simple. The first half of Mulholland  Drive is the rejected pilot for</p>
<p>an aborted television series, and the</p>
<p>second half was shot as a regular Canal Plus project, with a more censorious</p>
<p>attitude toward the film industry in Los Angeles and the predatory creatures</p>
<p>grouped together under the code name "Hollywood."</p>
<p> If that were all Mulholland  Drive was about, the film could be</p>
<p>dismissed for its banality. Curiously, however, people I have talked to from</p>
<p>Los Angeles feel, as I do, that Mr. Lynch-far from condescending to La-La-Land</p>
<p>or condemning it-actually displays a degree of affection for this slice of</p>
<p>Americana, however garish or menacing it may seem.</p>
<p> When wide-eyed, blond Betty</p>
<p>(Naomi Watts) arrives at Los Angeles airport, bubbling over with optimism about</p>
<p>her chances of making it big as a movie star, the screen drips with an unfunny</p>
<p>irony because of the broadness of the approach. We soon recognize in Betty</p>
<p>the fabulous indestructibility and invulnerability</p>
<p>of the blessed innocent. Just before her arrival, a mysterious brunette (Laura</p>
<p>Elena Harring) miraculously escapes a mob hit through</p>
<p>a fortuitous traffic accident that leaves her would-be assassins dead. The</p>
<p>brunette finds her way down a hill and into a luxurious home lent to Betty by</p>
<p>her aunt. The brunette sees a poster of Rita Hayworth</p>
<p>in the house and adopts the name Rita because an attack of amnesia has deprived</p>
<p>her of her memory. Betty immediately resolves to help Rita find her true</p>
<p>identity.</p>
<p> Meanwhile, Mr. Lynch is busy inserting a series of bizarre incidents</p>
<p>such as Nathanael West at his most hallucinatory</p>
<p>could never have imagined. There is a dwarf, of course, here incarnated as a</p>
<p>movie mogul. Usually memorable character actors</p>
<p>like Robert Forster as Detective McKnight and Dan Hedaya</p>
<p>as a studio executive named Vincenzo come and go and</p>
<p>are never heard from again. There is a 2 a.m.</p>
<p>Mexican "concert" that makes Mr. Lynch's Blue Velvet</p>
<p>(1986) look like the Grand Ole Opry. It is simply not</p>
<p>to be believed, and perhaps not even to be understood. An unexplained boogie</p>
<p>man pops out and in, causing a fatal heart attack for some unknown</p>
<p>character.</p>
<p> Into this maelstrom, Betty</p>
<p>and Rita bond as fearless searchers for the truth of Rita's identity.</p>
<p>Betty's path crosses that of film</p>
<p>director Adam (Justin Theroux) when she goes to the</p>
<p>studio for an audition that has already been fixed by the powers that be. Adam</p>
<p>is in every way a pathetic wretch, whose wife and pool-man lover have kicked</p>
<p>him out of his mansion. Eventually,</p>
<p>Betty and Rita discover Rita's former</p>
<p>apartment and a dead body in bed to boot, which sends them screaming back to</p>
<p>Betty's place. I'm not sure, but I think this is the end of the TV pilot.</p>
<p> What follows is a sizzling lesbian sex scene that looks more</p>
<p>Canal Plus than American television, even on the cable level. Rita has seduced</p>
<p>a willing Betty, and the relationship is tenderness itself. Then, suddenly, the</p>
<p>characters switch around, with Betty morphing into Diane, a hard-edged</p>
<p>leading-lady wannabe, and Rita morphing into capricious Camilla, the star who</p>
<p>barely tolerates Diane's attentions as she flirts brazenly and publicly with</p>
<p>director Adam, who has become stronger and even more corrupt in the transition.</p>
<p>As Betty, Ms. Watts had already given intimations that there was something</p>
<p>smoldering under her sunshiny gee-whiz personality. Ms. Harring,</p>
<p>on the other hand, has a tough time making the leap from Rita to Camilla.</p>
<p> It all doesn't add up very well, but Mulholland  Drive is one of the very few movies in which the pieces not only</p>
<p>add up to much more than the whole, but also supersede it with a series of (for</p>
<p>the most part) fascinating fragments. From The</p>
<p>Straight Story (1999) and The</p>
<p>Elephant Man (1980) at an emotional peak, to the shaggy-dog strangeness of</p>
<p>the Twin Peaks</p>
<p>epics, Mr. Lynch remains our most inconsistent auteur, who always plays</p>
<p>entirely by his own rules. </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Robert Guédiguian's</p>
<p>The Town Is Quiet ( La Ville Est Tranquille ), from a</p>
<p>screenplay by Jean-Louis Wilesi and Mr. Guédiguian, penetrates into several tormentedly</p>
<p>interlocking lives in the city of Marseilles, while retaining a scenic</p>
<p>perspective on a deceptively peaceful cityscape. In the process, many of the</p>
<p>contemporary problems of the Western</p>
<p>world-racism, drugs, economic injustice, abortion and anti-abortion-are given</p>
<p>unforgettably human faces. One has almost forgotten that a mere movie</p>
<p>can deal with serious political and social issues without sloganizing or dehumanizing its characters.</p>
<p> Michèle (Ariane Ascaride) is a blond woman in her late 30's who is first seen working in a fish market in picturesque</p>
<p>fashion, tossing enormous fish from one watery venue to another. Her strenuous</p>
<p>labors in the market are nothing when compared to the stresses and strains</p>
<p>awaiting her at home. As she rides her motorbike from work across much of Marseilles,</p>
<p>she is on her way to becoming a recurring mobile figure in the teeming life of</p>
<p>the port city.</p>
<p> But at home, she is forced to confront a surly unemployed husband</p>
<p>on the dole; a promiscuous daughter, Fiona (Julie-Marie Pamantier),</p>
<p>hooked on heroin; and an infant granddaughter wailing fruitlessly for</p>
<p>nourishment until Michèle comes home and feeds the</p>
<p>child, without any help or even gratitude from the rest of her "family." As if</p>
<p>this is not enough of an ordeal, Michèle is soon</p>
<p>forced into the position of securing heroin for her bedridden addict of a</p>
<p>daughter and even injecting the heroin herself, because her daughter's hands</p>
<p>have become too shaky for the task. As Michèle</p>
<p>alternates between filling her granddaughter's bottle with nutrients and filling Fiona's veins with heroin,</p>
<p>she becomes a veritable Mother Courage of the fish markets.</p>
<p> One day, Michèle's</p>
<p>path crosses that of Paul (Jean-Pierre Darroussin),</p>
<p>an ex-dockworker who has betrayed his striking co-workers by accepting the firm's offer of</p>
<p>severance pay, with which he purchases a taxi. He encounters Michèle when she runs out of gas for her motorbike. He</p>
<p>gallantly siphons some fuel from his cab to help her get home and then follows</p>
<p>her, hoping to start a relationship.</p>
<p> At first, Michèle rejects Paul's</p>
<p>advances, but after a time, and when the need for her daughter's heroin becomes</p>
<p>truly desperate, Michèle prostitutes herself for Paul</p>
<p>and anyone else who is available. Her regular supplier is her childhood</p>
<p>sweetheart, Gérard (Gérard Meylan), who runs a small bar but has a sinister second</p>
<p>life. As the various characters enter the film, they introduce us to different</p>
<p>strata of society.</p>
<p> When Paul visits his retired</p>
<p>father and mother, he pretends that his business is going well and that he has found a serious</p>
<p>girlfriend. Actually, he has lost his cab license because of repeated meter</p>
<p>violations. He is thus stamped as a perpetual loser who lies to his parents,</p>
<p>and yet he ultimately emerges as a sympathetically supportive benefactor in Michèle's desperate life. (Paul's father happens to be a</p>
<p>disillusioned old Communist who can still sing every verse of "L'Internationale," which he does, and which marks the first</p>
<p>time I have ever heard it sung in its entirety).</p>
<p> An interracial subplot is provided by Viviane (Christine Brüches), a music teacher estranged from her womanizing,</p>
<p>pseudo-liberal, upper-class husband, and Abderamane (Alexandre Ogou), an idealistic</p>
<p>young North African, just out of prison, who is one of her former students. The</p>
<p>politics here are very explicit, but the rhetoric engulfs the characters before</p>
<p>they can be developed as distinctive individuals. The melodramatic dénouement</p>
<p>seems flimsily contrived in this area, despite some interesting political views</p>
<p>of the French anti-immigration movement.</p>
<p> By contrast, the abortion issue bleeds out of the deepest</p>
<p>feelings of Michèle and Gérard</p>
<p>in their unfolded past. And when Michèle finally</p>
<p>cracks from all the fearsome pressures beating down on her, she and her</p>
<p>daughter experience a moment of spiritual epiphany that is guaranteed to stop</p>
<p>viewers in their tracks as they contemplate the many faces of love all the way</p>
<p>to the grave.</p>
<p> Lynch in La-La Land</p>
<p> David Lynch's Mulholland Drive ,</p>
<p>from his own screenplay, is hanging around as one of the most controversial</p>
<p>films of the year, which is to say that half the people I talk to who have seen</p>
<p>it like it, and the other half dislike it or even hate it. Mr. Lynch's Mulholland  Drive</p>
<p>shared the directorial Grand Prix at Cannes along with Joel Coen's</p>
<p> The Man Who Wasn't There , and observers</p>
<p>on the scene shrugged off the direction of</p>
<p>both films, as well as the films themselves, despite the fact that both</p>
<p>directors have  cult</p>
<p>followings in Europe.</p>
<p> As it turned out, when I</p>
<p>finally saw the two films here, I liked them both, but in different ways. Mr. Coen's film has a beginning, middle and end, while Mr. Lynch's work is really two different films tacked together</p>
<p>with many of the same actors and characters marching off in different</p>
<p>directions. The explanation for Mr. Lynch's nonlinearity is quite simple. The first half of Mulholland  Drive is the rejected pilot for</p>
<p>an aborted television series, and the</p>
<p>second half was shot as a regular Canal Plus project, with a more censorious</p>
<p>attitude toward the film industry in Los Angeles and the predatory creatures</p>
<p>grouped together under the code name "Hollywood."</p>
<p> If that were all Mulholland  Drive was about, the film could be</p>
<p>dismissed for its banality. Curiously, however, people I have talked to from</p>
<p>Los Angeles feel, as I do, that Mr. Lynch-far from condescending to La-La-Land</p>
<p>or condemning it-actually displays a degree of affection for this slice of</p>
<p>Americana, however garish or menacing it may seem.</p>
<p> When wide-eyed, blond Betty</p>
<p>(Naomi Watts) arrives at Los Angeles airport, bubbling over with optimism about</p>
<p>her chances of making it big as a movie star, the screen drips with an unfunny</p>
<p>irony because of the broadness of the approach. We soon recognize in Betty</p>
<p>the fabulous indestructibility and invulnerability</p>
<p>of the blessed innocent. Just before her arrival, a mysterious brunette (Laura</p>
<p>Elena Harring) miraculously escapes a mob hit through</p>
<p>a fortuitous traffic accident that leaves her would-be assassins dead. The</p>
<p>brunette finds her way down a hill and into a luxurious home lent to Betty by</p>
<p>her aunt. The brunette sees a poster of Rita Hayworth</p>
<p>in the house and adopts the name Rita because an attack of amnesia has deprived</p>
<p>her of her memory. Betty immediately resolves to help Rita find her true</p>
<p>identity.</p>
<p> Meanwhile, Mr. Lynch is busy inserting a series of bizarre incidents</p>
<p>such as Nathanael West at his most hallucinatory</p>
<p>could never have imagined. There is a dwarf, of course, here incarnated as a</p>
<p>movie mogul. Usually memorable character actors</p>
<p>like Robert Forster as Detective McKnight and Dan Hedaya</p>
<p>as a studio executive named Vincenzo come and go and</p>
<p>are never heard from again. There is a 2 a.m.</p>
<p>Mexican "concert" that makes Mr. Lynch's Blue Velvet</p>
<p>(1986) look like the Grand Ole Opry. It is simply not</p>
<p>to be believed, and perhaps not even to be understood. An unexplained boogie</p>
<p>man pops out and in, causing a fatal heart attack for some unknown</p>
<p>character.</p>
<p> Into this maelstrom, Betty</p>
<p>and Rita bond as fearless searchers for the truth of Rita's identity.</p>
<p>Betty's path crosses that of film</p>
<p>director Adam (Justin Theroux) when she goes to the</p>
<p>studio for an audition that has already been fixed by the powers that be. Adam</p>
<p>is in every way a pathetic wretch, whose wife and pool-man lover have kicked</p>
<p>him out of his mansion. Eventually,</p>
<p>Betty and Rita discover Rita's former</p>
<p>apartment and a dead body in bed to boot, which sends them screaming back to</p>
<p>Betty's place. I'm not sure, but I think this is the end of the TV pilot.</p>
<p> What follows is a sizzling lesbian sex scene that looks more</p>
<p>Canal Plus than American television, even on the cable level. Rita has seduced</p>
<p>a willing Betty, and the relationship is tenderness itself. Then, suddenly, the</p>
<p>characters switch around, with Betty morphing into Diane, a hard-edged</p>
<p>leading-lady wannabe, and Rita morphing into capricious Camilla, the star who</p>
<p>barely tolerates Diane's attentions as she flirts brazenly and publicly with</p>
<p>director Adam, who has become stronger and even more corrupt in the transition.</p>
<p>As Betty, Ms. Watts had already given intimations that there was something</p>
<p>smoldering under her sunshiny gee-whiz personality. Ms. Harring,</p>
<p>on the other hand, has a tough time making the leap from Rita to Camilla.</p>
<p> It all doesn't add up very well, but Mulholland  Drive is one of the very few movies in which the pieces not only</p>
<p>add up to much more than the whole, but also supersede it with a series of (for</p>
<p>the most part) fascinating fragments. From The</p>
<p>Straight Story (1999) and The</p>
<p>Elephant Man (1980) at an emotional peak, to the shaggy-dog strangeness of</p>
<p>the Twin Peaks</p>
<p>epics, Mr. Lynch remains our most inconsistent auteur, who always plays</p>
<p>entirely by his own rules. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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