The Beat That My Heart Skipped Movie Review
The Beat That My Heart Skipped Review

"The Beat That My Heart Skipped" Overview

Rating: NR
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Jacques AudiardProducer : Pascal Caucheteux
Screenwiter : Jacques Audiard,Tonino Benacquista
Starring : Romain Duris,Aure Atika,Emmanuelle Devos,Niels Arestrup,Jonathan Zaccaï,Linh Dan Pham,Mélanie Laurent
James Toback's Fingers is an odd film, but it's an even odder film to become
fascinated with for nearly 30 years. French director Jacques Audiard (whose
Read My Lips was an undersung gem) has remade Fingers, updated it for the
zeros, and given it a Parisian bent... and the end result is just as compelling
as Toback's original.
The story tracks closely with the original: Thomas Seyr (Romain Duris) is a
wayward twentysomething who, with partner Fabrice (Jonathan Zaccaï) is trying
to make a name for himself by completing shady real estate deals half done with
cash and half done with muscle. Thomas is the muscle. Meanwhile, his life is a
shambles -- his ailing father (Niels Arestrup) can't get the Russian mafia to
pay him the money he's owed, but he's marrying a "glorified prostitute" anyway.
Fabrice, meanwhile, is cheating in his lovely wife (an unforgettable Aure
Atika), and eventually Thomas fills in for him.
But the major undercurrent is that Thomas would really love to be a concert
pianist and leave the thug life behind for good. But Thomas has anger
management issues that are at odds with the inner calm that music often
requires. Which way will life take him?
The story of Thomas Seyr is a story of missed opportunities and poor decisions,
and Duris (an actor with a prodigious amount of work overseas but largely
unknown here) does wonders with his role. There's not a scene that doesn't make
you feel sorry for Seyr. As a viewer, you want to reach in a whisper to him
about how he might make his life a little better than before. The Beat That My
Heart Skipped (the title comes from a line in a Jacques Dutranc song) reflects
all that is good about modern French cinema -- despite its origins in a
decidedly American film.
Beat turns into a sparking generator, with cryptic gaps in the story that --
after a few moments -- you finally realize you didn't need at all. The end
result is that Audiard's film is imbued with an energy that's hard to ignore
and that compels you to watch. It's also without a trace of pomposity that many
might associate with arthouse films. Don't be scared of the subtitles.
As a director, Audiard has an erratic record, with long gaps between movies.
If that's what it takes to keep cranking out quality movies, he gets my
wholehearted blessing.
Aka De battre mon coeur s'est arrêté.
Skip to my loo.
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Review by Christopher Null
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