Berlin
Don't Touch The Axe
Ne Touchez Pas La Hache (Italy)
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Antoinette de Langeais - Jeanne Balibar
Armand de Montriveau - Guillaume Depardieu
Princesse de Blamont-Chauvry - Bulle Ogier
Vidame de Pamiers - Michel Piccoli
Le Duc de Grandlieu - Barbet Schroeder
Adapted from the novella "The Duchesse de Langeais," which makes up part of Balzac's "La Comedie humaine," the yarn begins with the grief-stricken French General Armand de Montriveau (Guillaume Depardieu) lingering around a Majorcan church, which has a nunnery attached. Residing there is a French nun he believes to be Antoinette de Langeais (Jeanne Balibar), a woman he has loved and lost.
Using his influence as a Napoleonic soldier and hence a combatant for Catholicism, Montriveau convinces the presiding priest to grant him an audience with the cloistered woman. Speaking from behind a grille and chaperoned by Mother Superior, the two are reunited, showing glowing embers of their spent passion.
Action then jumps back five years to reveal how the fire began. A bored and married socialite on the Restoration-era Parisian circuit, Antoinette is intrigued by the wounded soldier, whose globetrotting adventures include two years as a prisoner in Africa. At a ball, she requests an introduction and begins to tease him with her coquettish ways. Upon going home that evening, Montriveau declares to himself that this woman will be his lover.
Narrative depicts the extended flirtations the mores of the era allowed a woman to inflict upon a willing male. If love is an art, then Madame de Langeais is a more skillful artisan than most. Over nights, then months, she mercilessly toys with the pompous man with all the precision of a chess grand master.
For the pic's first half, Montriveau seems a stuffed shirt. But the second half sees the Napoleonic warrior aggressively turning the tables, and it is Antoinette who is made to look foolish for thinking she could so casually toy with an expert strategist.Protags are intentionally exaggerated, a fraction more restrained than caricatures. At Rivette's command, both thesps are required to walk a very fine line. Balibar is given the more treacherous thespian journey, but both she and Depardieu manage to adroitly embody their characters.
Narrative becomes more serious as the romantic oneupmanship progresses. Rivette uses intertitles (including some direct quotes from Balzac) to move the plot along and underline the dry wit. Helming is both leisurely and exact, offering auds ample opportunities to intimately observe the selfishness and folly of two people who would rather fight than switch.
Costumes and sets are luxurious, tech credits solid.
Camera (color), William Lubtchansky; editor, Nicole Lubtchansky; music, Pierre Allio; production designers, Manu de Chauvigny, Giuseppe Pirrotta, costume designer, Maira Ramedhan-Levi; sound (Dolby SR), Florian Eidenbenz; assistant director, Shirel Amitay. Reviewed at Berlin Film Festival (competing), Feb. 14, 2007. Running time: 137 MINS.
With: Anne Cantineau, Mathias Jung, Julie Judd, Marc Barbe, Nicolas Bouchaud, Thomas Durand, Beppe Chierici, Victoria Zinny, Remo Girone, Paul Chevillard.
(French, Spanish dialogue.)
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