add your comments

5x2 Movie Review

5x2 Review

ANATOMY OF A DIVORCE...IN REVERSE

Inventive director François Ozon travels backwards through a troubled marriage in smart but flawed '5x2'

A scene from '5x2'

"5x2 (In subtitled French)" Overview

**1/2 stars

87 minutes | Unrated
LIMITED: Friday, June 24, 2005

Cast and Crew

Directed by François Ozon


Starring Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Stéphane Freiss, Francoise Fabian, Geraldine Pailhas, Michael Lonsdale


Opening with an extended scene of such dry divorce-relat= ed legalese that after a while it becomes almost funny (property division, child support, life insurance, taxes), "5x2" is another entirely unique cinematic experience from writer-director Fran=E7ois Ozon.

The young filmmaker has a penchant for inventively tweaki= ng the nose of whatever genre he's working in -- 2003's dark noir thriller "Swimming Pool" was ironically sunshiny, 2002's "8 Women" was a musical spoof of Agatha Chr= istie whodunits (or perhaps a murderous spoof of Technicolor musicals). His new endeavor may sound a little more traditional -- it tells the tale of a once-happy marriage falling apart -- but leave it to Ozon to start with the divorce and work backwards to the couple's first flirtations on a beaut= iful beach.

In the first of five episodes going back through time, a drained-looking Marion and Gilles (Val=E9ria Bruni-Tedeschi and St=E9phane Freiss) finalize their separation, then go to a hotel room for a last romp in bed that shows just how ugly their relationship has become. Later scenes allude to the infidelity, unreasonable demands, emotional disconnects and other turning points that are not immediately apparent to the characters themselves.

As the film back passes through the birth of the couple's son, then their honeymoon and wedding (a civil ceremony emblematically as dry as the opening scene's divorce), Bruni-Tedeschi and Freiss weave increasingly subtle hints of discontent and temptation into their performan= ces, while Ozon builds an image of better times that do stick with the characters even through their worst of times.

But despite its strong acting and purposefully clever str= ucture, "5x2" is only sporadically engaging -- and often off-putting. Ozon lets us see unattractive truths in these people (for instance, Gilles is a terribly selfish and sometimes cruel lover), but the director doesn't find enough romantic spark (or enough kindness) in the relationship's earli= er scenes to make the audience really empathize with the initial attraction.

Ozon's originality and talent for tapping a psychological raw nerve makes "5x2" a noteworthy film even with these caveats. But characters the audience could get behind -- whose points of view were easier to slip into ourselves -- would have made for a better movie.




Review (c) Rob Blackwelder


click here - Write for us - get your reviews published on Contactmusic


add your comments




©2008 Contactmusic.com Ltd, all rights reserved