Sans moi (2007) Poster

(2007)

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
3/10
Sans Moi Aussi
dbdumonteil4 December 2009
A bourgeois woman who's got a very good job in edition hires an Au pair girl to take care of her children ;of course she is a divorcée and her lover is none other than her new girl's one.This girl seems to have strange habits and she often welcomes a (nasty?) man in her employer's house.The highlight of the movie,so to speak ,is an orgy with straights and lesbians :fantasy or reality? Which does not matter anyway;the lead actress is rather sluggish and her co-star gets out of her way to sound "disturbing" to no avail.This is what you call a real chore:an intellectual movie with interminable frames of mind,which sounds sometimes like a left over of the worst aspects of the notorious Nouvelle Vaguelette.

Like this?Try these ...(which does not mean these are bad of course!) "Persona" Ingmar Bergman "Betty" and "Les Biches " (Claude Chabrol)
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Super nice movie
egonkuballack30 August 2010
I don't share the opinion of my "pre-poster" here...

Its a really nice movie in the "style" of good old french movie making, with very deep, intense and very creative mind-works..

Its a very particular European,french movie from which i would say, that Hollywood never could make a movie with such a smooth, creative tune...

The movie lives by a slightly melodramatic "ground"-tune, persistent through the whole movie...

By that its absolute superb played by the main actress and also, but not far so good, by the supporting actors...

So, if u want to see a very creative, good old European movie its really worth to look at... And don't let u irritate by the pre-poster here...its always the same with very good movies...95% of the normal "pouplation" don't understand, realize its quality..
5 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
More French-language weirdness
lazarillo26 January 2014
This is another one of the French movies, perhaps inspired by early Claude Chabrol movies like "Betty" or "Les Biches", that feature two women of different ages and backgrounds who become obsessed and enmeshed with each other. Other films in this vein include "See the Sea", "Swimming Pool", "Nathalie", and perhaps in some respects even the gory horror film "Inside". Of course, this particular film is more hallucinatory and confusing than most and told from the perspective of unreliable protagonist. And it's only available in French with no subtitles (which really doesn't help either in my case). Yael Abacassis is a recently divorced mother who hires a nanny (Clemence Poesy). Only in France would a prospective nanny chain smoke at a job interview, but the neurotic mother does too (amazingly the children don't die of lung cancer during the movie). The older woman becomes obsessed with the sex life of the younger woman, especially after she finds out that they seem to be dating the same man. She even follows her to a sex club one night (If you're busy stalking your babysitter, who's watching your children?). The movie only gets stranger, more hallucinatory, and more confusingly ambiguous from there.

It probably sounds like I didn't like this, but I kind of did (not that it couldn't have done with some English subs). Dense ambiguity is still better than being mercilessly beaten over the head with every plot point, which is too often the Hollywood style. I have never seen Abacissis before, but Poesy will be familiar to many for her role as "Fleur Delacourt" in "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" where she made the hearts (and perhaps other parts of the anatomy) of male "Harry Potter" fans throb. I've seen a couple of her foreign films now and while she's much less famous, she's already clocked more nude scenes than Emma Watson probably ever will.

Not that I'd recommend THIS movie to "Harry Potter" fans, but if you're familiar with the neurotic female "doppleganger" theme in French films, you'll probably appreciate a film like this, even if it isn't in the class of Claude Chabrol or Francois ("See the Sea", "Swimming Pool") Ozon.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed