FROM THE LAND OF THE MOON (2016)
Directed by Nicole
Garcia
IFC Films, 120
minutes, R (nudity, sexuality)
In French with
subtitles
★★
From the Land of the
Moon was nominated for eight César awards and won none, thereby proving
that sanity prevails in the land of fromage
and croissant. Even though Marion Cotillard was cast in the lead role of
Gabrielle, the best that can be said of the film is that Cotillard's appearance
is akin to placing an elegant beret atop a cheap wig. The film garnered middling reviews and the only thing that
kept it from being savaged is that a woman, Nicole Garcia, directed it.
Think I'm kidding? Imagine if a man directed a film with these
themes. Gabrielle is a sexually precocious teenager who tries and fails to
seduce one of her married male teachers. She's also incorrigible, which leads
her mother, Adèle (Brigitte Roüan), to arrange a hasty marriage to a Spanish
laborer, José (Alex Brendemühl), whom Gabrielle finds boring and physically
ugly. José agrees not to have sex with Gabrielle because, after all, the
arrangement is financial insofar as he's concerned—not to mention that
Gabrielle is obnoxious and mean-spirited. José does, however, prosper and he's a
decent man who is at least willing to keep Gabrielle in material luxury.
But wait, we have a reason for Gabrielle's unpleasantness.
The French title for this film is Mai de
pierres, roughly "stone sickness." Gabrielle's libidinous desires
are not so much a matter of frustrated sexual awakening as the fact that her
body is riddled with kidney stones that occasionally cause her to double over
in agony. So it's off to a posh sanitarium in the Alps to take a cure—not that
the state of medicine is very advanced during this time, which is right after
World War Two and in the midst of France's disastrous attempt to reassert
control over Indochina. Gabrielle spends her days taking various water cures
and throwing wobblies, until she mellows a bit in the presence of a kind nurse,
Jeannine (Victoria DuBois), and when she helps care for and develops a deep
lust for a handsome amputee André (Louis Garrel). Or at least that what's we
are led to imagine, because we see things through Gabrielle's thoughts and not
all of them are reliable.
This could have been a film about female desire, or mental
illness, or perhaps even France's fall from geopolitical relevance. One could
have, for example, equated André's missing leg and feverish weakness with the
dismembering of France's prewar colonial might, with Gabrielle representative
of a population weighed down (stone-like) by sclerotic leaders blind to new realities.
Instead it's just a big strip tease for a final reveal for characters about
whom we've long since ceased to care. Not even Cotillard can redeem a role
that's essentially that of a mimsy mooncalf.
There are but two reasons to consider this film. The first
is its beautiful glimpses of the Alps in their niveous winter splendor and again
in their verdant summer clothes. I'd suggest downloading a good travelogue
instead. The second reason would be to open a contentious dialogue about double
standards in contemporary filmmaking. Is a sexist film any less so if a woman
directs? I'll skip that debate and simply declare From the Land of the Moon unworthy of further analysis.
Rob Weir
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