Or: the time Chantal Akerman decided "screw it" and directed a pop bubble-gum serio-comic musical set in a mall where three or four women (including the lovely and quite beautiful in middle age Delpine Seyrig) and a young and older man respectively are either in love or questioning their life choices; if you think they won't wind up with the ones they want, well, maybe you've seen a movie before!
This is Akerman trying Jacques Demy on for size, and its by FAR her most commercial and accessible work. Not every musical number is great and I woild have loved the movie (as opposed to just ranking it as very good/kind of unique) had the filmmaker got a choreographer and included more dancing. But the "Gossip Song" (the one where all the hairdressers are at their stations) is sublime and something I could hear every month or so.
And saying it is Pop Bubble Gum is a self conscious move that is more akin to the Nouvelle Vague influence still in Akerman's bones and it does have an air of heartbreak and sadness behind the words. It is a departure in style, of course, but the spirit of people looking for connections and it falling apart falls in nicely with her other work... and yet it is very funny to think of someone coming to this as their entry point into her oeuvre and saying "wow, that was a bittersweet symphony of French comic romantic ennui bliss! I should see more by her..." Gulp.
Golden Eighties
1986 [FRENCH]
Comedy / Musical
Plot summary
Three young women at a hair salon all like the son of the clothing store proprietors across the mall. Although Robby is selfish and shallow, he's appealing to Lili, the salon's manager, who's trendy and also the salon-owner's moll; to Mado, who's innocent and sweet; and to Pascale, who's intelligent but passive and downcast. Robby's dad tells him to grow up and see beyond the mercurial Lili, so he proposes suddenly to Mado. She's delighted, but the day before the wedding, Lili returns to give Robby another look. In the background, a Yank who was a soldier in France in World War II returns to Paris and tries to recapture the love of his wartime sweetheart, Robby's mom.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
January 21, 2023 at 06:30 PM
Director
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The most underrated and unabashedly entertaining film by Chantal Akerman
Not raised to the level of satire.
The Paris based Belgian director Chantal Ackerman tries something a trifle wide of her customary metier with what one might suppose is an attempt at a pastiche of Hollywood musicals. The structure of the scenario has virtually all of the action taking place within a Parisian shopping mall, "Toison d'Or" (the name of which is the wittiest item in the film) and revolves about the romantic inclinations of young Robert, son of the owners of a ready-to-wear boutique. Robert is in love with the manager of the next-door hairdressing salon, Lili, mistress of a wealthy businessman who purchased the salon for her to keep himself in good romantic standing. Other complications involve Mado, who works for Lili and who is in love with a non-responsive Robert and an American, a former lover of Robert's mother Jeanne (Delphine Seyrig); he has returned to Paris and wishes to replicate their affair with her. Primary musical contributions are from Sylvie (Miriam Boyer) who manages a juice bar, and "The Four Boys", implanted in most scenes to give occasional observations akin to those produced by a Greek chorus. Ackerman's normal strain of pessimism is adulterated here, most often due to the seeming herds of young salon employees that pop in and out to comment upon the fickleness of lovers, and the director's deconstructive style is most evident in her lyrics for the four songs composed for this work, wherein banal eroticism generally replaces the romantic impulse, however little sense the rambling text produces. There are, as might be expected, acidic statements from Ackerman, who also contributes to the script, but her favourite subjects: politics, sexuality and identity are forced to share the screen with mundane requirements of a rather pedestrian plot. Since she must sublimate her disinterest in codified time for this linear narrative, we are spared another of her mannered exercises in cinematic semiotics, and although her production is empty of much in the way of merit, it is sporadically amusing and watching Seyrig work is always an experience to be valued.