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Search our database of more than 3,600 film reviews. We have been discovering spiritual meanings in movies for nearly four decades. The Most Spiritually Literate Films of: |
Film ReviewBy Frederic and Mary Ann BrussatLa Vie en Rose Directed by Olivier Dahan Warner Home Video 06/07 DVD/VHS Feature Film PG-13 - substance abuse, sexual content, brief nudity, language, thematic elemen In her 47 years, Edith Piaf (1915-1963), the acclaimed French chanteuse, experienced a roller-coaster ride of exhilarating highs and incredibly depressing lows. Abandoned as a child by her Italian mother, she never got over being rejected; it stayed with her as a raw wound in her psyche and heart. During World War I, her father took her to live with his mother who ran a house of prostitution. Edith was looked after by Titine (Emmanuelle Seigner) who grew very attached to her. The little girl joins the circus with her dad and then is forced to live the vagabond's life on the streets with him. Edith surprises herself and her father when she first sings for coins. Promoter and entrepreneur Louis Leplee (Gerard Depardieu) hears her and immediately hires her to perform in his nightclub under the new name of Edith Piaf (Marion Cotillard) which means "the little sparrow." Audiences are impressed by the emotional vitality of her singing and the fantastic range of her voice. Her career is momentarily derailed when her mentor is killed but she finds another patron who teaches her how to "live the song." Constantly fearing a fall back into poverty and oblivion, Edith steels herself against failure with alcohol and later, after an automobile accident, with drugs. Director Olivier Dahan has fashioned an emotionally powerful screen portrait of the famous French singer who was once told by the actress Marlene Dietrich that her voice was "the soul of Paris." He wisely uses the original recordings of Piaf's voice. The film occasionally overreaches by trying to include far too many details of extraneous matters but the superb performance of Marion Cotillard wipes all this away especially in the astonishingly effective closing scenes of Piaf's story. Dahan was at one time a painter, and this artistic emphasis vividly comes across in the following scenes:
La Vie En Rose ends on an emotional high with Piaf's rendition of "Jen e regretted de rien," a song that scoops up in its embrace a lifetime of struggle and triumph. Special DVD features include a featurette. Reviews and database copyright © 1970 – 2009 by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat |
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