Heart in the Right Place: Chokri Lets the Body & the Camera Do the Talking in Rom Dramedy
The cookie begins to crumble oddly when we innocently find ourselves at those types of house party gatherings where couples talk about everything under the sun and impart their knowledge — whether wanted or not. Once the kernel of an idea enters the open space, it tends to permeate and it becomes not a matter of time but opportunity. Magalie Lépine-Blondeau’s Sophia crosses over to the other side – she is going too where no left-leaning intellectual usually goes: cabin country with someone of a different social and economic class. He is also good with his tools sorta speak. Pierre-Yves Cardinal (best known internationally as the antagonist in Xavier Dolan’s Tom at the Farm) is quite possibly just a roll in the hay. For a good portion of the film’s narrative, we see the pair evolve and make plans for something concrete however the charm might wear off as the friends and in-laws only remind Sophia that this is not her kind.
One item we find in Chokri’s filmography to date is the need for women to situate themselves in their own timeline (Chokri and Lépine-Blondeau teamed for 30s aren’t so nifty portrait in the short Quelqu’un d’extraordinaire) and sometimes presenting feminism within male-world parameters – we find a little of this here but its really about culpability and about ratcheting up one’s rationale. The go-for-it and we only live once is just one facet of selfishness – something that innately would make the world work a bit better. Employing regular Dolan cinematographer André Turpin, the pair work with almost horror parameters that we might find in giallo – the camera zooms in and out of shots, pans over to the other piece of the atom – the notion of couple hood gets an aesthetic treatment that reminds us we are two peas in a pod, but that we are split versions of ourselves. It’s a rather alluring choice.
While Lépine-Blondeau might have surface-level work she is nonetheless a delight and charismatic. One iconic dish wearing glove sequence is a lovely cardiac moment at once that explores the mental blockage and heteronormative values. Simple comme Sylvain reminds us that there is so much more to this thing called life especially if we become complacent or need to add mistakes to an otherwise perfect little existence.
Reviewed on May 18th at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival – Un Certain Regard. 110 Mins
★★★/☆☆☆☆☆