The Blue Room

THE BLUE ROOM Mathieu Amalric stars and directs in a taut adaptation of a Simenon novel

Mathieu Amalric stars and directs in a taut adaptation of a Simenon novel

"Did she bite you often?" Julien Gahyde (Mathieu Amalric) is being questioned about his affair in minute detail, over and over again, by lawyers and detectives. This is an ingenious flashback device. We don’t know yet what crime has been committed, but his lover Esther (Stéphanie Cléau) draws blood right at the start of this claustrophobic and ambiguous film, set in a provincial French town somewhere near Poitiers.

Things to Come

THINGS TO COME Isabelle Huppert superb in Mia Hansen-Løve's film of melancholy maturity

Isabelle Huppert superb in Mia Hansen-Løve's film of melancholy maturity

One of the many astonishing things in Mia Hansen-Løve’s fifth film is watching Isabelle Huppert hold back tears. In one scene they smear almost involuntarily down her face, in another she transforms them into a bark of nervous laughter. Huppert plays Nathalie Chazeaux, a sixty-something Paris philosophy teacher, who paces the film with almost frantic speed while her life unravels around her.

Valley of Love

VALLEY OF LOVE Huppert and Depardieu play an accomplished desert two-hander

Huppert and Depardieu play an accomplished desert two-hander

There are memorable appearances from two great actors playing close to the top of their game in Guillaume Nicloux’s Valley of Love, but they’re almost upstaged by something else. Nothing human – though their reunion and interaction in the film is being “directed” by an absent third party – but rather the environment in which they find themselves: the stark desert beauty and almost unbearable temperature of California’s Death Valley.

Summertime

SUMMERTIME Evocative early-Seventies French drama of sexual discovery confronting traditional values

Evocative early-Seventies French drama of sexual discovery confronting traditional values

Set at the beginning of the 1970s, Catherine Corsini’s Summertime (La belle saison) is a story of love in a political climate, one in which the post-1968 assertions of a changing society have infused the public context in theory but do not ultimately translate into liberation for the film’s two lead women characters. The restrictions of tradition, especially in the rural world in which the greater part of Summertime is set, finally prove too strong for their relationship.

Marguerite

MARGUERITE Touching Gallic transposing of American story of bad art humanly redeemed

Touching Gallic transposing of American story of bad art humanly redeemed

You may never have heard of Florence Foster Jenkins, although she has definitely earned a certain renown among music-lovers. For all the wrong reasons: the American soprano, who performed at private recitals in the early decades of the last century, before a climactic Carnegie Hall appearance a month before her death in 1944, was famous for the sheer awfulness of her voice.

DVD: Fidelio: Alice's Journey

Despite smatterings of the ludicrous, a spiced-up sea voyage brings self-discovery

Fidelio: Alice's Journey can literally be described as relating a journey of self-discovery. A mechanic on the Marseille-registered freighter Fidelio, the equally titular Alice navigates the seas with an all-male crew and explores who they are while investigating her own sexuality.

DVD: The Jacques Rivette Collection

Art-auteur’s lost films could be the year’s most important home cinema release

It’s a general rule that extras on a home cinema release should not be watched before the feature. This sumptuous box set of French art-auteur Jacques Rivette’s most – until now – hard-to-see films reverses that. Just as the director turned the nature of cinema on its head with his oblique, often-lengthy, dream-like contemplations, The Mysteries of Paris: Jacques Rivette’s Out 1 Revisited must be seen before Out 1: Noli me tangere, as a way in to the just-short of 13-hour epic it examines.

DVD: Microbe and Gasoline

DVD: MICROBE AND GASOLINE Michel Gondry returns to form with a fantasy riff on childhood friendship

Michel Gondry returns to form with a fantasy riff on childhood friendship

Michel Gondry’s last film, the unwatchably hyperglycaemic Mood Indigo (2013), was so arch and quirky it irritated more than appealed. Thankfully, Microbe and Gasoline resets the dial to the charm levels of 2008’s Be Kind Rewind. And things hadn’t been plain sailing before that too. The stilted, US-made The We and the I (2012) suggested that, after The Green Hornet, Gondry was a fish-out-of-water in America. Microbe and Gasoline is low-key, sweet, warm and made in France.

Fidelio: Alice’s Journey

Challenging French film about engagement, or lack of it, in unsettling ocean environment

The title of French director Lucie Borleteau’s first feature conceals a range of meanings. Fidelio is both the name of the enormous maritime freight vessel on which most of the action takes places, and a clear hint at “fidelity”, a concept with which its independent heroine Alice (Ariane Labed) negotiates throughout. If its French original, Fidelio: l’odyssée d’Alice, also suggests something else, the “Odyssey” of Alice’s journey meaning a return to the starting-point of home, then our expectations are challenged.

DVD: The New Girlfriend

DVD: THE NEW GIRLFRIEND Humour and warmth in François Ozon’s contemplation of gender and sexuality

Humour and warmth in François Ozon’s contemplation of gender and sexuality

The off-the-wall premise of The New Girlfriend could have been one adapted by Pedro Almodóvar. After married woman Claire’s close childhood friend dies, she gives an undertaking to look after the widowed father David and the couple’s daughter, to whom she is godmother. While keeping her promise, she accidentally discovers he is a secret transvestite – David says his wife knew of this.