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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita
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Little Bitty Burger Barn
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Barack Obama and Me (247)
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Save Lobo: A Siberian Husky Mix is Sentenced to Die (28)
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita (13)
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Are You Hot Enough for Citizen Lounge? (6)
All This Useless Beauty
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Rotten to the Corps: A Question of Justice at Texas A&M (140)
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The Spiderwick Chronicles is Both a Smart Children's Fantasy and a CGI-dependent Weepie
Tangled Web
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Charlie Bartlett Could Use a Dose of Mean
Kids These Days
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Definitely, Maybe is Absolutely, Positively Rewarding
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La Vie En Rose
Marion Cotillard gives a star turn, but can't save Edith Piaf biopic
By Ella Taylor
Published: June 21, 2007plifted beyond its merits by a stunning performance from Marion Cotillard, the humdrum biopic of Edith Piaf, La Vie En Rose, jogs obligingly along with Piaf the legend rather than the woman. It's not hard to do, given the fuzzy borders between Piaf's undeniably scarred life and her relentless gift for revisionist autobiography. By any measure, France's favorite songbird had a lousy childhood. Shuttled from pillar to post of Paris's slum district by her mother, an alcoholic cafe singer and part-time hooker, Piaf was eventually dumped as a toddler by her father (a circus contortionist) on his mother, who ran a brothel. This serial abandonment led to a self-destructive streak that dogged Piaf through her years singing for scraps on the streets. A meteoric rise to fame did nothing to ease the existential panic, and Piaf spent years as a soused party animal with scads of unreliable lovers who made her miserable and vice versa. Two tumultuous marriages didn't help, nor did Piaf's addiction to morphine after a serious car crash. Dragging herself from one performance to another long after she should have quit, at age 47 she finally succumbed, defiantly but famously with no regrets, to cancer in 1963. If that's not a movie, I don't know what is.
Piaf was a brawling mess who parlayed the pain she wore on her sleeve into a glittering career as France's heartbreak balladeer. To this day her gravel voice thrills me, but she was also a rabid self-mythologizer who liked to play up her childhood travails. An unblushing fan, writer-director Olivier Dahan has bought the package and added a myth or two of his own, cooking up a fictional warm-hearted tart (Emmanuelle Seigner) who nurses little orphan Edith through a period of temporary blindness (unconfirmed) and drums up sufficient funds to dispatch the child on a pilgrimage, where Saint Theresa provides a miracle cure that Dahan hands us without so much as a cocked eyebrow.
La Vie En Rose trudges dutifully from one costumed "defining" event to the next, building to a kind of Piaf theme park that plays out like a bad parody of Dickens or Balzac. Slack-jawed proles wearing artistically grimy faces drop everything to gawk as the tiny waif belts out "The Marseillaise" on a street corner, followed by copious shots of rapt and bejeweled audiences in Paris's cavernous Olympia Hall as Piaf, discovered by a Svengali nightclub owner played by Gérard Depardieu, finds the voice and the style that seal her phenomenal success.
Quite aside from her towering vocal range and forcefulness as a populist interpreter of the French chanson, Piaf was an instinctive social leveler (she hobnobbed with Cocteau, but the love of her life, played as a sweet-tempered lug in the movie by Jean-Pierre Martins, was a married middleweight boxer and pig farmer) who became a unifying romantic voice for war-torn France. But there remains the murkier and still unresolved question of whether Piaf, along with her pal Maurice Chevalier, was a collaborator who happily performed for Nazi military bigwigs during the Occupation, or a clandestine protector of the French Resistance. Reluctant to muddy his diva with complication, Dahan sticks with neurosis, focusing in on the often yawning chasm between the terrified child and the grandstanding diva.
Cotillard doesn't do her own singing who, after all, could replicate the soaring rasp that burst fully formed out of that tiny body? In a sense, every scene in La Vie En Rose is a holding pattern for the next ballad, which would reduce the movie to a musical were it not for Cotillard's command of character. Though she's far prettier than Piaf at any age and has to be heavily made up to come close to the bug-eyed jolie-laide that was la Mème, Cotillard not only has her fluttery mannerisms down, but the fragile sense of self that kept her always on the edge. With shoulders hunched, head tipped and hands flung forward, Cotillard gives us a Piaf stranded between the mutinous child she never fully outgrew and the crowd-pleasing supplicant who could never get enough audience love. If Piaf was an empty shell, she knew how to put on a show, on and off stage. Channeling the shell, the performer and the shambles in between, Cotillard raises France's poor, beloved chanteuse clean out of mundane pathos, into the ruined grandeur she deserves.










Ella Taylor - a name best hurled into the dustbin of critic infamy - apparently didn't see the same movie I did, entitled "La Vie En Rose". I found the movie riveting, exciting, and possibly the best I've ever seen. I don't cry at the drop of a hat. I found myself contrasting it to the absurdly bad "Pirates of the Caribbean: Whatever" of a few weeks ago. I'll bet that Taylor's job feeds her a head-fattening diet of such lard. What "pilgrimage", Ella? There was no such thing in the movie. Were you on morphine too? Or just addicted to crappy American movies?
Comment by Gary W. Moody — June 23, 2007 @ 08:43PM
I'm going to be kind and simply second Mr. Gary Moody's comment. He said it all so well about this ridiculously clueless review by Ella Taylor who's apparently one of your employees. Where do you get your writers, if you can call them that? C'est la MOME, not la MEME, girlie. If you can't even handle that much, don't take the assignment. And no, don't even try to pass that off as a clever gank from Live Journal. Mr. Gary Moody is right. Stick with Pirates and Disney, honey. That's all you can handle while you're shoving your popcorn. After all, we're in Bush country?
Comment by thanh nguyen — July 3, 2007 @ 01:35PM