Movie
Review | A Very Long Engagement
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- It's back into the trenches of World War I
(1914-1918) for this bittersweet epic tale of a stubborn young French
woman who simply will not accept the fact that her fiancé is dead.
A polio survivor, Mathilde (Audrey
Tatou) is engaged to marry her childhood sweetheart Manech (Gaspard
Ulliel) when he is sent off to the battlefront. When the war is over
and Manech doesn't return, she refuses to believe he died and embarks
on a mission to prove that he is still alive. To do so, Matilde must
investigate how Manech allegedly perished in combat - and this bold
quest involves not only hiring a private detective (the late Ticky
Holgado) but also tenaciously tracking down those who were in a muddy
trench called Bingo Crepuscule during one particular skirmish. Her
dogged perseverance reaps rewards as, in one of many memorable
encounters, she receives a revelatory letter from a Polish war widow
(Jodie Foster).
With an expressive face that's familiar
from "Amelie," Audrey Tautou's plucky determination is
charming and, perhaps, director Jean-Pierre Jeunet from that same 2001
Oscar-nominated film intended this as a melancholy companion piece.
Based on Sebastien Japrisot's best-selling novel, it's filled with
Bruno Delbonnel's stark battle flashbacks. The cinemagraphic carnage
is particularly gruesome in contrast to the lush bucolic visuals that
incorporate Jeunet's preference for sepia tints. And Angelo
Badalamenti's original score is haunting. In French with English
subtitles, on the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, "A Very Long
Engagement" is a sweeping, sentimental, suspenseful 8. It's just
a shame that, due to arcane Academy rules, this picture is not
eligible for a Best Foreign Film Oscar since it was not submitted as
France's official entry.
Grade: 8/10
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