Love Me If You Dare Movie Review
Love Me If You Dare Review

"Love Me If You Dare" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Yann SamuellProducer : Ève Machuel,Patrick Quinet,Christophe Rossignon
Screenwiter : Jacky Cukier,Yann Samuell
Starring : Marion Cotillard,Guillaume Canet,Thibault Verhaeghe,Josephine Lebas Joly,Emmanuelle Gronvold
The enemy of the protagonist-lovers in this fateful love story is not their
feuding families as in Shakespeare's tragedy Romeo and Juliet, but each other.
The instrument of injury isn't a knife but a game. And when the game that was
so much fun as children develops into a competition that substitutes for trust
and emotional connection, the game wins. Or so director Yann Samuell wants us
to believe.
As an eight-year old, Julien (Thibault Verhaeghe) can't accept his mother's
(Emmanuelle Gronvold) mortality as cancer steals her life away. It devastates
him and his reality when she finally passes and he loses the parent he was
closest to and needed most. He focuses his energy away from his heartbreak and,
when young Sophie (Josephine Lebas Joly) becomes his playmate, her mischievous
imagination leads them both into a world of amusement. That world includes
destructive pranks and dirty words in class, each the response to a game of
"Dare."
Visually symbolizing the state of the game, a colorful tin box that Julien's
mother gave him as a parting gift passes from one to the other as they take on
the dare. The possessor of it is obliged to increase the level of the prank,
making it more unexpected, riskier, ever more irreverent and scandalous.
By college age, Julienne (Guillaume Canet) and Sophie (Marion Cotillard) are
involved with other people but continue the game. By now, the level of
invention and psychic damage is a barrier to any other form of communication
between them, becoming more impregnable with each "Gotcha!" The emotional tie
they feel for each other, which we sense is the strongest one in their lives,
is never verbally expressed. Julienne nearly chokes on his tongue when he
tries. They have become emotional cripples in a state of monk-like denial.
The portrayal of this process is rich in detail and talent even as its focus on
unfulfillment becomes exhausting and hopeless. In his showcase of cleverness,
writer-director Yann Samuell (co-written with Jacky Cukier) finds every shaded
note that will support his premise but, in a pattern of disappointment, the
heart of the story loses its beat. Audience estrangement follows. Every failure
of the couple to connect emotionally draws us into a bloodless landscape. What
started out as warm, compelling drama contrives its way to something cold and
uncompromising.
It may be a finely made exercise in the futility of game playing that merits a
nod for fascination, and praise should be heaped on both sets of actors
involved, children and adult, but daring is not a replacement for caring. In
the end, our lovers' flaw is the quicksand of misplaced priorities they've
stepped into, miring them in emotional limbo. Samuell's flaw was in making it a
gloomy and calculating exercise in despair rather than a credible experience.
Shakespeare had it right and did it better.
Aka Jeux d'enfants.
Love me if you double dog dare!
Reviewer: Jules Brenner





