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French film shows
difference between compassion and pride
Positive,
optimistic outlook of one character
contrasts with selfishness of the other.

The Dreamlife of Angels, starring Elodie Bouchez,
Natacha R使nier and Gr使oire Colin, is directed by
Erick Zonca. Rated R.
By
Peter T. Chattaway
ChristianWeek film critic
In the past few years, I have grown
increasingly fond of European films. While most major
American films seem intent on telling their audiences how
to feel and how to think, the better foreign films take
an artistic step back, eschewing music and other
manipulative tricks and allowing their audiences to
relate more directly to the characters.
The Dreamlife of Angels is such
a film. It begins with Isa (Elodie Bouchez), a
20-year-old who owns nothing but the contents of her
rucksack, arriving in the French city of Lille and
looking for a place to stay. She sells cards with
religious images on them; one potential customer offers
her a job at his clothing factory. It turns out
shes not very good with the sewing machine, but
before she is fired, she finds a roommate in her
co-worker Marie (Natacha R使nier).
Marie, we discover, is house-sitting;
the true residents of her apartment, a mother and
daughter who have been hospitalized by a car accident,
are friends of her aunts. But Marie herself has
never met them, nor does she express any interest in
them. Instead, she spends her nights club-hopping and her
days working low-paying jobs while wishing she were not a
working-class girl obliged to lend money to her
impoverished father.
If it seems, at first, that Marie does
Isa a favor by letting her have a place to stay, Isa more
than repays the debt, bringing Marie breakfast in bed,
joining her in her flirtatious social escapades, and
providing her with a general sense of companionship.
But Isa does more than that. She visits
the hospital where her hosts have stayed and discovers
that the mother who owns the apartment has already died,
while her daughter, Sandrine, is in a coma. Isa has
discovered Sandrines diary back in the apartment,
and so she begins to read portions of it to her. She even
begins to add to it, as if to tell Sandrine, should she
ever recover, about the life she lived while she was
unconscious.
Generosity
of spirit
In these scenes and others, we find
that Isas generous spirit transcends her
hardscrabble environment. She is not some sort of naive
do-gooder; the scar that cuts across her eyebrow suggests
that she has experienced the harsher side of life. But
despite that, she maintains a positive, optimistic
outlook, always seeking to bring out the best in the
people whose lives she touches.
Marie, on the other hand, sees the
world in basically selfish terms. Shes interested
in what she can get, not what she can give. Even though
her first boyfriend, a local bouncer named Charly
(Patrick Mercado), seems to be offering her his
unconditional love, she defines their relationship in
essentially possessive terms: he "had" her, she
"had" him.
When she catches the eye of
Charlys boss, a 20-something club owner named Chris
(Gr使oire Colin), Marie tries to exploit him, sleeping
with him in order to boost her own social status.
Unfortunately, she blinds herself to the fact that he is
exploiting her, too. (The sex scene between them, thick
with jump cuts, exposes the loveless, desperate quality
of their affair. In its original version, it was also
intense enough to garner the film an NC-17 rating in the
United States.)
Gradually, the differences between Isa
and Marie begin to pull their friendship apart, and it is
to the credit of both actresses, who shared the Best
Actress prize at the Cannes film festival last year, that
their characters feel as authentic as they do (though
R使nier has a bit of an uphill struggle with her
ultimately unsympathetic character).
First-time feature director Erick Zonca
gives the ending a bit too much closure for my tastes,
but he ably articulates the differences between the
other-centred life and the self-centred life, between
compassion and pride. This is a film that will linger in
my mind for quite some time.
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