Arnaud Desplechin films his father who has just sold the family house. Its emptying creates an opportunity to open drawers, browse old photos, and read ancient letters. His father chooses this moment to speak of his own mother Thérèse, who passed away when he was 18 months old. He has no memory of her, and yet he seems to know her very well.
Director | Arnaud Desplechin |
Actor | Claire Valade |
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Wrought through with Arnaud Desplechin’s signature romantic and lyric tension, its tracking shots of Roubaix accompanied by the music from Vertigo and its frames deliberately distant, as if we were eavesdropping, *L’aimée* mingles narratives like no other. In the foreground, the filmmaker stages his relationship to his family and its departed through the family home, about to be emptied, and a portrait of a beloved woman, his paternal grandmother, who died too young for even her own son, Desplechin’s father, to have a single direct memory of her. Yet in the film’s opening, Desplechin, ever the methodical narrator, clearly tells us about another late beloved, this one much more recent, but whose face already eludes him. He never says her name, and never will, but her presence floats throughout the film, between the lines, colouring how we take in other narrative threads taken from various writings left by his late grandmother. While he discusses these sparse snippets of daily life with his father, trying to cobble together a story that is at least partially his own, it becomes clear that this game of memory, supported only by a patchwork of second-hand memories and impressions gleaned from photos and letters, crafts only a blurry portrait of the departed woman and the life of her loved ones—a portrait that still offers some comfort for the living. In the end, is it so important to be sure of our memories?
Claire Valade
Critic and programmer
Wrought through with Arnaud Desplechin’s signature romantic and lyric tension, its tracking shots of Roubaix accompanied by the music from Vertigo and its frames deliberately distant, as if we were eavesdropping, *L’aimée* mingles narratives like no other. In the foreground, the filmmaker stages his relationship to his family and its departed through the family home, about to be emptied, and a portrait of a beloved woman, his paternal grandmother, who died too young for even her own son, Desplechin’s father, to have a single direct memory of her. Yet in the film’s opening, Desplechin, ever the methodical narrator, clearly tells us about another late beloved, this one much more recent, but whose face already eludes him. He never says her name, and never will, but her presence floats throughout the film, between the lines, colouring how we take in other narrative threads taken from various writings left by his late grandmother. While he discusses these sparse snippets of daily life with his father, trying to cobble together a story that is at least partially his own, it becomes clear that this game of memory, supported only by a patchwork of second-hand memories and impressions gleaned from photos and letters, crafts only a blurry portrait of the departed woman and the life of her loved ones—a portrait that still offers some comfort for the living. In the end, is it so important to be sure of our memories?
Claire Valade
Critic and programmer
FR - L'aimée
EN - L'aimée