| Index | 7 reviews in total |
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
A capricious beauty., 3 December 2000
Author:
morning75 from Taunton, England
Though Chance or Coincidence is a film surficially concerned with death and
grief, never have I enjoyed a film that deals with this most emotive
subject
in so trenchantly and poignantly a manner, while at the same time managing
to exude such effulgence and vitality.
Its singularity is born perhaps of the balletic theme that runs throughout;
the main character's passion for the art form making for some glorious
set-pieces as well as a subject that, delightfully, elects to express her
feelings through dance at the most unlikely moments.
Indubitably the exuberance of the cinematography plays its part; when its
subjects dance, both dramatically and literally, rather than observe, the
camera becomes a part of their movement, follows, and joins
in.
And mention must be made of the glorious lighting; of a French film dealing
at least in part with such themes of darkness and tragedy, this is an
atypical example in its determined eschewing of any visual reticence or
gloom in favour of an almost pugnacious optimism allied to a vibrancy that
lends each scene a unique glow, becoming a light that radiates through the
film as a whole, that rather than lessening the impact of its more
emotionally affecting moments, prevents it from ever becoming maudlin or
depressing.
Could the secret lie in the film's wilfully idiosyncratic handling of plot?
Certainly this is a rich conceptual concoction, featuring a particularly
exciting device in the video camera that plays such a pivotal role in an
interesting, joyfully unpredictable tale.
Surely the secret is in the script, sharp and intelligent, interpreted in a
range of superb performances from the cast; particularly enchanting is that
of star Alessandra Martines, wife of director Claude Lelouch, in whose
beautifully expressive eyes we may find the secret yet...
But ultimately, of course -- and predictably -- I will have to say that it
is all of these. Chance or Coincidence was a wonderful surprise in all
respects, as it will be to anyone who watches it, and I cannot recommend it
highly enough.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
An innovative and celebratory look at life, 28 November 1998
Author:
Trevor Davis from London, England
This is a wonderfully fresh portrait of a woman handling grief.
There are many themes at work, but it is the sense of people
being true to their intuition and instinct that holds the fabric
together. Using a a variety of locations around the world, the
lead character (played by Lelouch's wife), DV-cams her way from
country to country, using her training as a dancer to truly
great effect. The film is full of invention and surprise,
beautiful camerawork and extraordinarily all-encompassing sound.
A celebration of the game
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Some very good ideas, 30 May 2001
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Author:
hbbio from Paris, France
This movie analyses the impact of fate on lives by telling the story of a woman (Martines). I enjoyed the shifts between tragedy and comedy, and some funny lines as well. However, the movie sometimes wanders too much, some acting or sequences are cut too quickly. It appears to me as the draft of a wonderful movie. 7/10
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
A Movie That Has Haunted Me For Years, 17 December 2003
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Author:
kbreifler from New Jersey, USA
I watched this movie in '98 during the Chicago International Film Festival. The beginning was rather mundane and I considered walking out. Then came the pivotal moment. The pain of the lead character was searing, her journey worthy of the Flying Dutchman. Five years later, I still see her face. I would love to see this film again, but it is not available in the US.
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Innovative ride through coincidence, 7 November 1998
Author:
anonymous from London
An enjoyable movie, with depth and substance. Claude Lelouch's style of shooting close to sequence and only teling them the details of the scene as they are shooting gives the film a slightly documentary feel. One that is deliberate according to the director - and one felt slightly harrowing on the actors.
0 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
A Movie Meant To Be Despised, 12 August 2003
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Author:
inframan from the lower depths
I watched this movie on Sundance with increasing annoyance at the
pomposity
& pretentiousness of the characters & their vapid pseudo-"thoughts". The
movie seems to be the embodiment of every negative quality Francophobes
love
to throw (unfairly for the most part) at most French movies.
Then I discovered that it was directed by none other than Claude Lelouch,
the director of A Man and a Woman, the only movie I ever slept through
almost entirely (in the theater). Well, at least he's
consistent.
0 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Boring, 17 December 2000
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Author:
espen-4 from Oslo, Norway
A film about a woman losing her son and her boyfriend. OK. I don't mind a little sentimentality and art-movies. I also like good drama movies f.ex. Midnight cowboy, The last picture show and Peggy Sue got married. This film, however, centers around a woman feeling very for herself. And that is definitaly not entertaining on ANY level. It is just plain boring. 1 out of 10.
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