October 10, 1997

La Femme défendue (1997) ****

French director Philippe Harel described his extraordinarily original movie as ''a story of adultery filmed with a subjective camera, with only a single protagonist and without any secondary plot''. The camera takes the first-person point of view of a married man (whom we only see briefly in mirrors) as he meets, flirts with, seduces and falls in love with a beautiful young woman (superbly played by Isabelle Carre). Since the the narrative is entirely focused on their affair, and the viewer identifies with the male protagonist, the woman is in fact flirting, seducing and falling in love with the viewers. Most of the film consists of loving close-ups of her beautiful face, sometimes smiling, sometimes laughing, but always looking directly at the camera and allowing us to see in her expressive eyes every nuance of her thoughts and desires. ''La Femme défendue'' is a voyeur's dream come true - it offers a unique opportunity to observe a beautiful, shy, impressionable and hesitant young girl as she reveals the secrets of her heart. The result is an intensely erotic and intimate film, a truly memorable gem. Although originally made for French television, it was selected as an official competition entry at the Cannes Film Festival and then theatrically released to great critical acclaim. Adultery might seem like a tired old subject (especially in French cinema), but here its banality is transcended by the subtlety of the script, the quality of the mise-en-scène, and, above all, the luminous, star-making performance by Isabelle Carre.

Titanic (1997) ****

Starship Troopers (1997) ****

The Sweet Hereafter (1997) ****

Boogie Nights (1997) ****

Nil By Mouth (1997) ****

The Dress (1997) ****

Le Bossu (1997) ****

Jackie Brown (1997) ****

The Mirror (1997) ****

A brechtian film from Iran. An young actress refuses to play in a film.

My Best Friend's Wedding (1997) ****

This is the film where Julia Roberts and Cameron Diaz fight over Dermot Mulroney. Director P.J.Hogan, best known for his ultra-cynical Australian comedy "Muriel's Wedding" (1995), does an excellent job of combining sweetness with meaness, sunny optimism with bitchy sarcasm and sentimentality with ruthlessness. Best of all is Rupert Everett, a gay knight in shining armour riding to the rescue of a damsel-in-distress, while charming crowds with Burt Bacharach songs and sharp one-liners ("I don't send you men anymore", he tells Julia Roberts, "you don't have the faintest idea what to do with them"). Songs include:

"Wishin' And Hopin'" ***
"I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself" **
"I Say A Little Prayer" ***