Ma Saison préferée, 1993
[My Favorite Season]
André
Téchiné's films exist in a rarefied atmosphere between
idyllic nostalgia and haunting memory. Ma
Saison Préferée is the bittersweet
story of Emilie (Catherine Deneuve), a successful, repressed, middle
aged business woman, sensitively told through the banality of everyday
life: a pervasive, uncomfortable silence during family dinner; a vague
conversation with her degeneratively ill mother who suffers from lapses
of reason; an awkward, emotionally restrained reunion with her estranged
brother Antoine (Daniel Auteuil). It is a film about unspoken emotional
wounds that never heal - that seem to tear at the heart - but never
consume completely. Ma Saison Preferee is a beautifully realized,
deeply unsettling film about loss of connection and emotional isolation.
The order of the seasons, prefaced by the four acts, provides the
thematic evolution for Ma Saison
préferée.
The story begins in autumn, which symbolizes, not only Emilie's age
(as in Ingmar Bergman's Autumn
Sonata), but also the deterioration of her relationship with
her family. Winter is punctuated with the seeming end to her
marriage and departure. The advent of spring resurrects Antoine's
aberrant childhood dependency on the vulnerable Emilie. Summer
brings about a tenuous family reconciliation. Through all the
seasons, a pale yellow haze suffuses the film's exterior shots,
creating an atmosphere that is unnatural and suffocating. For
Emilie, there is nothing redemptive in the changing of the seasons,
only an eternal pattern of sacrifice, alienation, and silence.
Inevitably, Ma
Saison Préferée is about
the idle passage of time: too slowly to precipitate change, too
quickly to realize the consequences.
© Acquarello 1999. All rights
reserved.
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