A View of Love

A View of Love
Directed by Nicole Garcia
Produced by Alain Attal
Written by Nicole Garcia
Jacques Fieschi
Frédéric Bélier-Garcia
Natalie Carter
Starring Jean Dujardin
Music by Stephen Warbeck
Cinematography Jean-Marc Fabre
Edited by Françoise Bonnot
Emmanuelle Castro
Distributed by Pathé
Release date
  • 4 December 2010 (2010-12-04) (Marrakech)
  • 15 December 2010 (2010-12-15) (France)
Country France
Language French
Budget $11.1 million
Box office $16.4 million[1]

A View of Love (French: Un balcon sur la mer) is a 2010 French romantic mystery film written and directed by Nicole Garcia and starring Jean Dujardin.[2][3] Set mainly in the south of France, it tells the story of three pied noir children parted when Algeria became independent. Years later two meet again, one a married real estate agent and the other a mysterious woman being used to defraud his firm. A recurrent parallel is with the play Iphigénie, in which the three children had acted together, where two princesses compete for the flawed hero but one dies tragically.

Plot

In the south of France, Marc Palestro is a partner in the real estate agency of his father-in-law. A client calling herself Mrs Maldonato, who is interested in buying a large old house, intrigues him. He thinks she must be Cathy, his childhood sweetheart before his family fled Algeria in 1962. Memories of that time, both the horrors of civil war and the joys of adolescent love, grip him. When he offers Mrs Maldonato a lift, she takes a dip in the sea in her underclothes and then goes to a hotel room where the two make love.

She appears again to sign the preliminary contract to purchase the property. Obsessed with his first love, even though his mother tells him Cathy was killed in a bombing, Marc leaves his wife and daughter to try and find her once more. She however is the elusive front woman for a crime syndicate and is in fact an aspirant actress who is being coached in this role by Sergio Bartoli, another partner in the agency and her lover. Though she had let Marc think she was the dead Cathy, in reality she was a close friend of the pair called Marie-Jeanne and had always adored Marc.

Marc discovers enough to expose Sergio's plot and then, in pouring rain, is reunited with Marie-Jeanne outside a theatre where she has secured a part.

Cast

Reception

Calling it a "romantic and haunting film", a French review said:

"A magnificent idea drives the story: the woman with whom he falls in love to regain his memories is not the one he thought and it is a forgotten woman who reappears …. The film gradually frees itself from the psychological mechanics to reach a kind of lyrical abstraction ….The bold stand against the current climate (Dujardin in a completely lyrical and introspective role, the vagueness of time in the story, the absolute lack of irony) makes the film even more endearing."[4]

References

  1. http://www.jpbox-office.com/fichfilm.php?id=11499
  2. Jordan Mintzer (December 15, 2010). "Review: ‘A View of Love’". Variety. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  3. Todd McCarthy (April 19, 2011). "A View of Love (Un Balcon sur la mer): Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  4. (French) Les Inrocks, retrieved 26 July 2016


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