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Après la vie
2002 Crime / Drama
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Credits
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Director: Lucas Belvaux
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Script: Lucas Belvaux
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Photo: Pierre Milon
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Music: Riccardo Del Fra
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Cast: Dominique Blanc (Agnès Manise),
Gilbert Melki (Pascal Manise),
Ornella Muti (Cécile Rivet),
Catherine Frot (Jeanne Coste),
François Morel (Alain Costes),
Lucas Belvaux (Bruno Le Roux),
Bernard Mazzinghi (Georges Colinet),
Olivier Darimont (Francis Rivet),
Patrick Descamps (Jacquillat)
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Country: France
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Language: French
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Runtime: 124 min
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Aka: Trilogy: Three; After the Life; Three
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Summary
Pascal Manise is a police inspector who risks everything so that he can provide his drug-addicted
wife Agnès with a regular supply of morphine. His dealer is the notorious
crime baron Jacquillat. When a political terrorist, Bruno Le Roux, escapes from
prison, Jacquillat tells Pascal that he will receive no more morphine until Le Roux is
dead. While hunting the terrorist, Pascal is engaged by Cécile, a colleague
of his wife, to spy on her husband, whom she suspects is having an affair. Whilst
Pascal is thus occupied, and falling in love with Cécile in the process, Agnès
becomes involved with Le Roux. By this stage, Agnès hasn’t taken drugs for
days and, thinking Le Roux will help her, she offers him a safe hiding place. However,
Le Roux’s only thought is to settle his score with Jacquillat…
Review
Après la vie is one of three films directed
by Lucas Belvaux which make up a most unusual trilogy. The other two are:
Un couple épatant and
Cavale. All three films were made at
the same time, with the same cast and crew, and have narratives that run in parallel and
periodically overlap. The main characters in one film become secondary characters
in another, so there is a sense of seeing the same drama from three different perspectives,
an idea that works surprisingly well.
After the lacklustre comedy Un couple épatant
and the superlative noir thriller Cavale,
Après la vie is a gritty drama that revolves
mainly around the nightmare of drug addiction. Whilst the plot stretches credibility
in a few places, it is nonetheless a compelling and thought-provoking film, sustained
by some extraordinarily intense performances and some appropriately moody cinematography.
Dominique Blanc’s portrayal of a middle-aged drug addict is utterly convincing,
making her the lynchpin of the film. The scenes where her character goes into withdrawal
are truly harrowing to watch and a shocking reminder of the destructive nature of narcotics
addiction. In the calmer, more reflective scenes, there is a sense of quiet despair,
as though Agnès has endured an eternity of this Hell and can hardly face another
day.
The pathos and helplessness of Blanc’s character is amplified by Gilbert
Melki’s equally solemn portrayal of the husband, Pascal, a man who has allowed his wife’s
addiction to foster within him an equally tragic dependency. Pascal finds it hard
to love and uses his wife’s addiction to prove himself worthy of her. What other
reason could there be for him risking everything to provide the woman he married with
a constant supply of hard drugs? Pascal’s need for love is as intense as his wife’s
craving for morphine, and is no less destructive.
It’s a shame that we are periodically
distracted with plot threads hanging over from the other two films in the trilogy, because
there is a very profound human story at the heart of this film. Après
la vie is fundamentally a film about love and the need to be loved beyond all else.
This notion is so brilliantly encapsulated in the devastatingly effective closing sequence,
where light is shed on the film’s enigmatic title, and the spectator is left stunned.
© James Travers 2006
See also: Cavale Un
couple épatant
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