A Girl Cut in Two Movie Review
A Girl Cut in Two Review

"A Girl Cut in Two" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Claude ChabrolProducer : Patrick Godeau
Screenwiter : Cécile Maistre,Claude Chabrol
Starring : Ludivine Sagnier,Benoît Magimel,François Berléand,Mathilda May,Caroline Silhol
Quite a good portion of Claude Chabrol's tasty cocktail of romance and jealousy, A Girl Cut
in Two, has gone by before you realize that, in essence, nothing much of consequence
has happened. This is not a bad thing, and is more a testament to Chabrol's talent
behind the camera that he's able to keep his film engaging well past the point that
it should have any real right to be. It gives the film a certain drifting quality, even
if one knows that something more momentous is waiting in the wings.
Chabrol, who also co-wrote the script with Cécile Maistre, based his story in some
measure upon the sensational case of famous architect Stanford White's murder at
Madison Square Garden's rooftop theater in 1906. A classic "murder of the century"
case, the White murder had a plethora of salacious details for titillation, a number
of which Chabrol cannily appropriates for his own scenario. Set in the present day
in Lyon, A Girl Cut in Two seems at first like another portrait of an ennui-cloaked
artiste, whose fame and fortune no longer excites him. Charles Saint-Denis (François
Berléand, excellent in his understatement here just as he was in Tell No One) is an
aging novelist of incomparable fame living the perfect life. He lives on a beautiful
estate, is feted for his work almost nonstop, has a wife who doesn't appear to notice
or care about his habitual flirting, and the money to do essentially whatever he wants.
Being a famous novelist on the prowl, it doesn't take long for Saint-Denis to zero
in on one of Lyon's most attractive single females, the quite young and innocently
beautiful Gabrielle Deneige (Ludivine Sagnier).
While Deneige, who lives at home with her eminently sensible and disapproving mother,
is falling desperately in love with the much older Saint-Denis (who's something of
an arrogant buffoon, in addition to being a first-degree manipulator of the impressionable
young), she's also being pursued by a man her own age. Looking like a Gallic Jude
Law who's been on a months-long bender, Paul Gaudens (Benoît Magimel, marvelously
dissolute) is the scion of a local pharmaceutical fortune, as bored as he is wealthy. A sna
ke-like avatar of louche misbehavior, Gaudens is all pout and preen, lazing about
in tight-fitting velvet coats and tearing up the town in his zippy sports car when
he's not scheming how to make Deneige his.
In no particular hurry to move his story to its conclusion, Chabrol takes his time
limning the attractions and manias in this eminently tasteful little love triangle,
and provides plenty of entertainment along the way. Sagnier's beauty is played to
maximum effect (she looks here like a fresh-faced and younger Penelope Ann Miller), as
is her oddly innocent inexperience. When Saint-Denis decides to educate her in the
darker mysteries of desire (a point at which the film skirts and narrowly avoids
ludicrousness), she's emotively torn between her desire for love and an approving father figure,
and left emotionally broken between the two. Having Gaudens (who's as used to getting
what he wants as is Saint-Denis) leap impetuously into this fragile relationship
has an affectingly bull-in-the-china-shop effect.
Once Chabrol starts trying to tie his story together, however, the briefly intoxicating
mist of desire, jealousy, and rampant wealth dissipates quite quickly. Although this
was most likely the desired effect, blowing away the naïve attitudes held by his
characters and showing them the results of their actions, it doesn't necessarily make
for a coherent or affecting story. Although A Girl Cut in Two does come with an initially
heady and alcoholic kick, that proves to be a fleeting impression. Once viewers are
done with Chabrol's cannily crafted but fleeting film, its effects are quite easily
tossed off; no worries about hangovers here.
Aka La Fille coupée en deux, A Girl Cut in Half.
That'd be the top half.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



