Romance (TV Series 2020) Poster

(2020)

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7/10
Engaging, leisurely romantic drama with a healthy dose of suspense
lotekguy-120 April 2021
This six-episode French TV miniseries would be easy to write off as a chick flick. That would be wrong. The premise is that a guy (Pierre Deladonchamps) in the present who loves the music and culture of bygone eras sees a picture of a lonely, lovely woman (Olga Kurylenko) on a beach, staring out to sea. He falls so in love with his ideal of who she must be, and what is making her appear so forlorn, that he is inadvertently transported back to the 1960s, where he meets her and the circle of her wealthy pals. Don't worry about how it happens. It just does. Go with it.

The woman is as mysteriously alluring in the flesh as in the picture, deepening his desires. Unfortunately, she's very involved with the rich dude who's hosting the summer of play for his cohorts. Pierre's character, who is something of a loser in our time, ingratiates himself with that privileged coterie, hoping to win maiden fair. But her current beau - a spoiled brat that can be quite cruel, or worse - is hell-bent on marrying her, creating strong elements of suspense and danger to the proceedings. That should keep most viewers of any gender going, even if romantic dramas aren't their usual choice.

Time-travel stories always have logical flaws, but that premise seems less intrusive than usual in this tale. The story runs for six episodes, which probably could have been edited to four or five for the less-patient, plot-driven viewers. Instead, we get long stretches without dialog to accentuate the moods of the principals and the gorgeous sets and settings of the privileged classes who can luxuriate in exotic climes like Biarritz. Kurylenko flawlessly portrays the mystique and magnetism of her character, elevating the series over what it might have had to settle for with a lesser actress. Who wouldn't travel in time, or go to other extremes, to unlock the key to what makes her so elusive?

The series is a worthy binge if you're not in a hurry. For a leisurely, lyrical romance, spiced up with looming scenarios of tragic consequences for our protagonists, this offers a reasonable way to share six hours with someone you love.
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8/10
More nuanced Time travel theme than most other n the genre.
zcbyrxnr16 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I really liked this program. I can agree with others that his lurking and spying made me speak out loud "this dude is creepy!" It is pure romantic fantasy. What made it different in the way they handled the time travel was how he was so aware of not saying things. But he still made little mistakes , like ordering a latte, or telling Alice the dangers of smoking to which she laughed. Had to come to tens that the constant gazing was as Chris told him was his idealization of Alice, yet he was madly in love with her while Chris just wanted to have her to one up his father. I'll take gazing over controlling every time. All along you get answers to why things have happened or why someone does something. Early on we see Alice swimming out sea and each time she looks like she will drown. It isn't until toward the end you see what she was doing it for. The ending sequence was interesting to the final scene. I think a few of the reviews I've read just want to use todays standards or just like dissecting in detail to hear themselves talk. They are missing the main pointing Love and this is a French romance. Of course everyone stops to see them kids in the runway! It's France!!! Amours. I liked the detail on the Odetta record having the torn record jacket. This along with the reality that he took the photo he fell in love with made it fit with Einstein's idea of time is linear band happens all at once. Past and present are the same happening at once. Hurts to think about to long. Finally when they meet I was surprised she was still young, but it is my contention this is how he sees her in his minds eye. I only wish for a bit more detail to fill in the ending for sure.
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8/10
What a beautiful story!
danliftman12 May 2021
I was drawn into this unique drama right away. Love, romance, suspense, with time travel as the central theme. Good guys, bad guys and characters you'll root for throughout. You'll consider this six-episode French miniseries time well spent, and you'll always remember the heartwarming ending.
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7/10
More people need to watch it Warning: Spoilers
I am surprised to see only 53 people have rated this series.

Its well made and the performances are really good ( except jeremy ).

The ending does not make sense because Alice still looks the same in the future when she re-unites with Jeremy. They were careful not to reveal the year when Jeremy returns to the future, but it still does not make any sense because Jeremy was born in 1986 and if he met Alice in 1960, who mustve been at least 25 years old at that time, then that makes Alice 65 years old in year 2000. And remember, Jeremy goes from year 2019 to year 1960, but we dont know what year he returns to, but it has to be at least 2010 if not 2019, because Jeremy is a grown adult, and it could not be year 2000, because that would only make him 14 years old, so it has to be at least year 2010, even though he looks same and not any younger. So logically, Alice should be 75 years old when she re-unites with Jeremy in the future, but she looks the same as how he left her in 1960. Impossibe.
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9/10
Makes me wanna fall in love
jrchandru-776263 July 2021
The story, characters and emotions are very beautiful.

If you're single watch this it'll make you believe in love.
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5/10
More normalisation of stalking behaviour by adolescent men
csteddy1 July 2021
Creepy main actor. Has the #metoo movement not reached the continent? Yes, you too can get the girl of your dreams, who is way out of your league if you relentlessly persue her.
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8/10
A clever metacommentary or laughably serious?
disha-militia28 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The original series in French is titled 'Romance.' It intricately explores both the beauty and sinister within Romanticism. It's worth watching for the aesthetic indulgence of lush affluent 1960s Biarritz and hypnotic music alone. At the same time, it subverts the romantic genre, parodying its tropes, rendering it intellectually provoking.

The English translation titles the series 'Wonderland'. It is an obvious reference to the titular nightclub central in the narrative. It also invokes transportation to a time and place of wonder. The literary allusion to Alice's adventures augurs the phantasmagorical ahead for our heroine.

Its time traveling delivers on the promise of an ode to nostalgia. Yet this is no Midnight in Paris, but rather a shadowy exposition using gaze theory. The series is a thriller, with the suspense carrying you forward. While, the comic elements towards the denouement offer laugh-out-loud amusement.

I trust this introduction suffices for you to decide whether you are going to watch it and hence herald this SPOILER warning henceforth. Please also note this review contains references to assault.

The protagonist is an anti-hero, Jérémy, played by Pierre Deladonchamps. We are introduced by way of his appropriate response to his young niece (developmentally normally and innocuously) proposing to be his girlfriend one day. After this initial reassurance, he is nonetheless revealed to be a creeper worthy of Humbert Humbert. I was terrified for our heroine as his stalking progressively escalates over the first three episodes. He unremorsefully lies, cheats, manipulates and breaks the law throughout the series. This is foreshadowed by his ex-girlfriend's explanation for leaving, underscoring that these psychopathic traits have been developmentally pervasive and not arisen as exceptions in the service of his 'love'. At the same time, he has redeeming features, such as his reticence to kill, his way with children, and (arguably) his profession as a doctor. It is this maintenance of the greyness of many of its central characters which render them lifelike and interesting.

The pinnacles of the series were the complexity of the tragic characters of Alice and Chris. Their masterful performances were delivered by Olga Kurylenko and Pierre Perrier respectively. Both Alice and Chris are classically beautiful, charismatic and passionate; riveting one's attention. What makes them truly compelling however is that, unlike the other characters, we are given their backstory. Both of them have tortuous trauma histories, and the series does not shy away from illustrating how it has brutally etched into their personalities and perspectives, drawing them toward ethically dark waters. The character of Margaret, played by Barbara Shultz, embodies elegance and devotion. She acts as a foil to Alice and Chris, illuminating the possibility of recovery from traumatic loss, as she personally grows through writing and relationships.

The 'gaze' acts a central motif. Each episode opens with the title sequence, watching Alice from behind, as she embodies the archetypal female, gracefully walking towards the sea, sundrenched in a red dress. There are recurrent references to 'love at first sight.' Jérémy falls 'in love' with Alice from a picture. He supposedly 'looks at her like no other man', even though we are repeatedly reminded that all men admire her beauty and mysteriousness. Beyond mere traffic, a plane stops to watch Alice and Chris kiss, as though they symbolise the zenith of 'true love.' Rather than colluding with this superficial understanding of love, the conflicting elements invite a deconstruction of objectification culture which many 'Romance' stories typically promote. Laura Mulvey proposed that the 'male gaze' in film objectifies the woman as a sexual thing (rather than a human being) through the triad gaze of the male characters, the camera portraying her, and the complicit observing audience (us).

It is evident that Chris objectifies Alice as a tool to garner the paternal approval which he has been forever deprived, as part of the psychological abuse inflicted by his Nazi father. A Freudian interpretation might propose that it's a manifestation of his Oedipal rivalry with his father, since his (bloodied nose) castration upon witnessing the primal scene (of his parents in flagrante).

Unlike the IMDb blurb which describes the series as "a passionate love story" and the prevalent critics which have concurred with this interpretation, I propose that Jérémy also objectifies Alice. He continually stalks her, invades her privacy and does not take no for an answer. While it was harrowing watching Chris assault Alice, it also felt like I was witnessing assault every time Alice was physically intimate with Jérémy. It was like seeing someone with so-called Stockholm syndrome identify with the aggressor, i.e. Unconsciously becoming whatever he wants her to be in order to survive. The fact that Jérémy ends up with her, and that the metaphysics of space-time bend to facilitate this, seals her tragedy. While she survived the fate of going to the concentration camps with her family, perhaps she could not face her cosmic aloneness, a condition that loomed large, in spite of killing the man responsible for her family's torture and death. The conclusion seems to highlight Jérémy's objectification of her. Rather than reuniting him with Alice in the modern day, as an old woman that still inspires his love, (presumably) time-travel conspires once again, to offer him the beautiful young woman he lusts after.

Where it becomes interesting is that I am forced to ask myself, if I am also objectifying Alice, in not just trusting her choice to be with Jérémy. This question is emphasized as, were the casting of the actors playing Chris and Jérémy reversed, her decision might be easier to believe, simply because Pierre Perrier has Prince Charming good looks. Such a disposition may be conditioned through countless iterations since childhood, of witnessing the hero and heroine archetypes being synchronously beautiful. Yet the series invites these reflections and opens space for the 'personifying gaze.'

The interplay of the picturesque and dissonant in this series recommends it as a sumptuous experience and dexterous metacommentary. Yet it remains ironically ambiguous, that instead of this generous interpretation, it may be intended as the grotesque fulfilment of an earnest 'Romance.'
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