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Embrassez qui vous voudrez
2002 Comedy / Drama / Romance
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Credits
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Director: Michel Blanc
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Script: Michel Blanc, Joseph Connolly
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Photo: Sean Bobbitt
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Music: Mark Russell
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Cast: Charlotte Rampling (Elizabeth
Lannier),
Jacques Dutronc (Bertrand Lannier),
Carole Bouquet (Lulu),
Michel Blanc (Jean-Pierre),
Karin Viard (Véronique),
Denis Podalydès (Jérôme),
Clotilde Courau (Julie),
Vincent Elbaz (Maxime),
Lou Doillon (Emilie),
Sami Bouajila (Kevin),
Gaspard Ulliel (Loïc),
Mélanie Laurent (Carole),
Mathieu Boujenah (Romain),
Mickaël Dolmen (Rena),
Barbara Kelsch (Pauline),
Nicolas Briançon (Dr. Davy),
Jade Phan-Gia (Mme Davy),
Serge Brincat (Samuel)
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Country: France
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Language: French
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Runtime: 103 min
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Aka: Summer Things; See How They Run
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Summary
After a stressful year, Elizabeth Lannier is looking forward to her holiday in Le Touquet.
When she learns that her best friend Véro will be staying in the same town, she
suggests they spend their holiday together. Véro agrees but must somehow
keep from her friend the fact that, since her husband Jérôme lost his job,
she is feeling the squeeze financially. At the last minute Elizabeth learns that
her husband cannot accompany her - he says he is too occupied with his work, but in reality
he is having an affair with a transsexual. In addition, her daughter, Emilie, has
decided to take a holiday in the United States, with - unbeknown to her parents - one
of her father’s employees, Kevin. With a bed going spare, Elizabeth invites one
of her friends, Julie, to stay with her, with her baby. Julie is something
of a nymphomaniac who always ends up with the wrong man. It happens again.
Meanwhile, Elizabeth has made friends with Lulu, an attractive lawyer whose husband Jean-Pierre
is convinced that she is cheating on him. With the holiday in Le Touquet rapidly
turning into a disaster, Elizabeth invites all of her friends to a garden party at her
home. If she is expecting everything to resolve itself nicely, she is in for a nasty
surprise...
Review
This magnificently orchestrated comedy of errors brings together some of the biggest names
in French cinema and is a major achievement for its director, Michel Blanc, by far his
best film to date. With so many characters and plots, it would have been easy for
this film to have ended up a convulted mess, but it hangs together remarkably well.
In fact, through a combination of good scripting, good editing and some great characterisation,
it is actually surprisingly easy for the spectator to follow what is happening.
In this exemplary ensemble piece, Blanc manages to get the best out of his cast - which
is headed by the sublime Charlotte Rampling - whilst also putting in a respectable performance
himself.
The wealth of talent on display makes this a rich mosaic in which human relationships
are skilfully dissected with sensitivity, acuity and a certain amount of justifiable brutality.
Whilst the film makes you laugh, it also makes you reflect on the injustice and absurdity
of human existence. None of the characters in the film seems capable of finding
fulfilment in their love lifes, yet all are willing slaves to their unbridled sexuality.
The situations and characters may be a little over-the-top, but there is more than a grain
of truth in what we see. Essentially, Embrassez qui vous voudrez is
a pretty damn honest reflection of life as we now live it. We may have more opportunities
and greater prosperity than previous generations, but if the result is a more fragmented,
less coherent and less satisfying way of life, can we ever be happier? The
film’s French title is both provocative and ironic, reminding us how devalued romantic
love has become in this fully liberated, live-for-the-present, throwaway society of ours.
© James Travers 2003
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