Après lui
2007 Drama


Review
Gaël Morel has come a long way since his acting film début in
André Téchiné’s evocative coming-of-age drama Roseaux sauvages (1994). À toute vitesse (1996)
marked the auspicious beginning of his career as a film director.
He has since directed four films, including a television drama. Après lui, his latest film,
confirms Morel’s reputation as one of the most promising auteur filmmakers of his generation.Après lui is a pretty cheerless drama in which a grieving mother tries to come to terms with the premature death of her grown-up son. This immediately brings to mind Nanni Moretti’s excellent 2001 film, The Son’s Room, but Gaël Morel’s treatment of the subject could hardly be more different. In his film, the son appears only briefly in the film’s introduction, and is then snatched away from us. The loss which his mother then experiences is vicariously transferred to the spectator in a way that is both subtle and brutal - through a combination of a very subdued cinematic style and a spectacularly intense performance from the film’s star, Catherine Deneuve. Denueve needs no introduction. She has graced cinema screens for five decades, during which time she has worked with some of the world’s greatest directors and made a huge contribution to the international appeal of French cinema. Now well into her sixties (not that you would ever notice), this iconic actress has lost none of her charm and ability to engage with an audience. Après lui is a film that seems to have been tailor-made for Deneuve and allows her to turn in one of her best performances for years. Watching Deneuve in this film is a truly moving and cathartic experience; anyone who has suffered the loss of a loved one will sympathise immediately with the character she portrays with such authenticity. Catherine Denueve’s tour de force performance only accounts for half of film’s impact, however. The other half lies in a well-crafted screenplay (which Morel co-authored with Christophe Honoré, another promising young filmmaker) and the way in which Morel constructs the narrative, cutting back on stylistic excess and eschewing implausible plot developments in favour of an almost cinéma vérité style of realism. The story he tells is poetically simple, unpretentious and devastatingly effective. © James Travers 2008 Catherine Deneuve, who has beguiled and moved filmgoers around the world for decades in such classics as Repulsion, Belle de Jour and Le Dernier métro, proves mesmerizing still in Après lui (a.k.a. After Him), a story about the struggle to continue living in the face of a terrible loss. The acclaimed drama, from director Gaël Morel, comes to DVD from IFC Films via MPI Media Group on August 11, 2009. The DVD release follows the film’s successful tour of the festival circuit, including its world premiere as a selection at the Cannes Film Festival. Deneuve stars as Camille, a divorcee whose beloved 20-year-old son has just died in a car accident. She is overcome with grief, but her anguish manifests itself in the strange obsession she develops for her son’s best friend, Franck, who was driving the car. While Camille’s ex-husband and daughter regard Franck as virtually a murderer, the lonely Camille chooses to begin a mysterious, disturbing relationship with him. Director Gaël Morel has built a reputation for intimate, keenly observed, character-driven drama in his films Full Speed, Under Another Sky and Dancing With Slaves. The film’s screenwriter, Christophe Honoré, who also wrote Dancing Slaves, started his career with the international sensation Girls Can’t Swim. Besides Deneuve, Après lui stars César winner Guy Marchand and Cannes Film Festival Best Actress winner Elodie Bouchez. © Cristina Garza (New York, USA) 2009 Write a review for this film...User Comments
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Director:
Gaël Morel
Starring: Catherine Deneuve, Thomas Dumerchez, Guy Marchand, Élodie Bouchez, Elli Medeiros Synopsis
When her son Mathieu is killed in a road accident, Camille finds that
her entire world is turned inside out. So deep is her sense of
loss that the only person she can turn to for support is Mathieu’s best
friend, Franck, who was responsible for his death. Only
Franck, tormented by guilt, seems to understand and share her grief -
neither her husband nor her daughter are of any comfort to
her. But Camille’s interest in Franck soon turns into a
very morbid kind of obsession..,
Credits
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© filmsdefrance.com 2009

