For a Woman

Last updated

For a Woman
Pour une femme.jpg
Theatrical release poster
French Pour une femme
Directed by Diane Kurys
Written byDiane Kurys
Produced byJérémie Chevret
Starring Benoît Magimel
Mélanie Thierry
Nicolas Duvauchelle
CinematographyGilles Henry
Edited bySylvie Gadmer
Music by Armand Amar
Distributed by EuropaCorp
Release dates
  • 12 June 2013 (2013-06-12)(Cabourg)
  • 3 July 2013 (2013-07-03)(France)
Running time
110 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget$8.7 million [1]
Box office$1.2 million [2]

For a Woman (original title: Pour une femme) is a 2013 French drama film directed by Diane Kurys. [3] [4] [5]

Contents

Plot

In the 1980s, following the death of their mother, sisters Anne (Sylvie Testud) and Tania (Julie Ferrier) clean out their mother's belongings. Coming across a man's ring among her mother's jewellery Anne, who is a filmmaker, becomes intrigued and begins researching and writing a story about the ring. She eventually discovers a photo of her estranged uncle Jean wearing the ring while posing with her mother and sister.

In 1946, just after World War II Soviet Jewish immigrants Léna and Michel arrive in Paris after escaping a concentration camp during the Holocaust and crossing the Alps. They apply for French citizenship as Michel was raised in France and fought for the French Foreign Legion. Léna reveals she is pregnant and gives birth to a girl the couple name Tania. In Lyon the couple make inroads with the underground Communist Party of France. After they are successful in their bid for citizenship Michel opens a taylor's shop making men's custom suits. He is interrupted one day by Léna who tells him a man claiming to be his brother, Jean, has showed up on their doorstep. Michel embraces Jean and treats him as one of the family but later reveals to Léna that he is unsure if the man actually is his brother as his brother Jean was only 9 when he left home and he can't remember what he looked like. He also becomes suspicious when Jean's story of how he came to Paris changes repeatedly.

Jean soon makes himself indispensable to Michel, helping him to procure hard to find cloth and transforming his business to ready-to-wear instead of custom made suits. As a result of his newfound success Michel buys a car, a fridge and For a Woman perfume for Léna.

While out for a stroll, Léna reveals to Jean that her marriage to Michel was a sham; arriving at a concentration camp, the guard in charge recognized Michel and told him he could leave. Michel then asked if he could bring his fiancée with him and proposed marriage to Léna without knowing her. While walking Jean realizes he is being followed but manages to escape. Eventually returning home Jean tells Michel that he works for the GRU, abducting and repatriating Red Army soldiers who have defected to the Free World.

Léna begins to feel attracted to Jean and eventually kisses him, when she thinks he will leave. Jean refuses to sleep with her and angrily criticizes Michel after they hear news about the award winning and recently published memoirs of Soviet defector Victor Kravchenko over the radio. Michel calls Kravchenko a traitor who defected out of Capitalist greed and who deserves to die, but Jean correctly accuses the Soviet NKVD of reopening Nazi death camps and filling them with political prisoners. Jean compares Joseph Stalin to Adolf Hitler and denounces Stalinism as no different than Nazism. Jean also accuses Michel of blindly following the party line and therefore being no different than the Nazis who murdered their parents. Michel explodes and tries to physically assault Jean, and then orders him to leave both the flat and his life forever. Frustrated with his brother and sister-in-law, Jean relocates and drops contact with his family.

Michel is approached by French police who tell him his brother is wanted for murder after killing an Alsatian who he had been wrongly believed to be an ex-Nazi. Léna is finally approached by a friend of Jean's who gives her an envelope to give to him and tells her where he is. Léna goes to visit him and Jean reveals that he really works for the Irgun and his actual mission is finding and killing Nazi war criminals before they can escape Europe. He now plans to use the money in the envelope Léna delivered to make Aliyah to the Mandate of Palestine. Before he leaves, however Jean and Léna finally have sex. Despite Léna wanting to flee with him, Jean tells her to stay with his brother. However, as she is leaving the hotel she sees police and goes back to Jean's hotel room to warn him. The two manage to escape but need Michel's help to cross the border. Despite Michel's anger over Jean's anti-Stalinism and he and Léna's relationship, he does help Jean cross the border by giving him his passport and by bringing Léna's as well, so she may go with him. Léna ultimately decides to return with Michel.

Despite this, their relationship is fractured when Léna gives birth to Anne the following spring and the two finally end their marriage six years later with Léna raising Anne far from Michel.

In 1990 Anne rushes to Ardèche, where her father has been hospitalized. She tells him that her film about his brother is now opening in Japan. Michel tells her that out of the whole story what he remembers most is falling in love with Léna. Michel dies in hospital and Anne and Tania gather to clear out his home. While there, Tania discovers their mother's bottle of For a Woman perfume, which her father has kept all those years.

Cast

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 90%, based on ten reviews, with an average rating of 6.33/10. [6] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating, the film has a score of 59 out of 100, based on 7 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [7]

The Hollywood Reporter's reviewer Boyd van Hoeij stated that the film was "handsomely put together" and found that Armand Amar's film score supported the transitions between temporal levels. [8]

Notes

The film had its roots in director Diane Kurys' coming across an old photograph of her father's mysterious brother, Jean, a decade ago. Her father, said Kurys, 'was always very angry with my uncle, and the two men never spoke - there were insinuations that something had happened involving my mother.' Kurys had been told by her mother, when her mother was dying of cancer in the early 1980s, that at her birth Kurys' father did not want to touch her, or talk to her. Since the photograph of her uncle Jean had been from some time in 1947, months before Kurys was born, she wondered whether she could have been the child of a liaison between her mother and uncle. The film is Kurys' creative imagining of that possible affair together with real memories of her parents' troubled marriage. [9]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anouk Aimée</span> French actress (born 1932)

Nicole Françoise Florence Dreyfus, known professionally as Anouk Aimée or Anouk, is a Jewish film actress who has appeared in 70 films since 1947, having begun her film career at age 14. In her early years, she studied acting and dance besides her regular education. Although the majority of her films were French, she also made films in Spain, Great Britain, Italy and Germany, along with some American productions.

<i>A Man and a Woman</i> 1966 film by Claude Lelouch

A Man and a Woman is a 1966 French romantic drama film directed by Claude Lelouch and starring Anouk Aimée and Jean-Louis Trintignant. Written by Pierre Uytterhoeven and Lelouch, the film concerns a young widow and widower who meet by chance at their children's boarding school and whose budding relationship is complicated by the memories of their deceased spouses. The film is known for its lush photography, which features frequent segues among full color, black-and-white, and sepia-toned shots, and for its music score by Francis Lai.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anne Parillaud</span> French actress

Anne Parillaud is a French actress who has been active since 1977. She is best known internationally for playing the title character in Luc Besson's film La Femme Nikita.

<i>And God Created Woman</i> (1956 film) 1956 French film

And God Created Woman is a 1956 French romantic drama directed by Roger Vadim in his directorial debut and starring Brigitte Bardot. Though not her first film, it is widely recognized as the vehicle that launched Bardot into the public spotlight and immediately created her "sex kitten" persona, making her an overnight sensation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michel Sardou</span> French singer (born 1947)

Michel Charles Sardou is a French singer and occasional actor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marie de Gournay</span> French writer

Marie de Gournay was a French writer, who wrote a novel and a number of other literary compositions, including The Equality of Men and Women and The Ladies' Grievance. She insisted that women should be educated. Gournay was also an editor and commentator of Michel de Montaigne. After Montaigne's death, Gournay edited and published his Essays.

<i>Les Uns et les Autres</i> 1984 French film

Les Uns et les Autres is a 1981 French film by Claude Lelouch. The film is a musical epic and it is widely considered as the director's best work, along with Un Homme et une Femme. It won the Technical Grand Prize at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival. In the United States, it was distributed under the name Boléro in reference to Maurice Ravel's orchestral piece, used in the film. The film was very successful in France with 3,234,549 admissions and was the 6th highest-grossing film of the year.

Diane Kurys is a French director, producer, filmmaker and actress. Several of her films as director are semi-autobiographical.

<i>Entre Nous</i> (film) 1983 French film by Diane Kurys

Entre Nous is a 1983 French biographical drama film directed by Diane Kurys, who shares the writing credits with Olivier Cohen. Set in the France of the mid 20th century, the film stars Isabelle Huppert, Miou-Miou, Guy Marchand, Jean-Pierre Bacri, Christine Pascal, Denis Lavant and Dominique Lavanant. Coup de Foudre means "love at first sight".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marie Dubois</span> French actress

Marie Dubois was a Parisian-born French actress.

<i>Man Is a Woman</i> 1998 French film

Man Is a Woman is a 1998 French film directed by Jean-Jacques Zilbermann.

<i>A Room in Town</i> 1982 French film

Une chambre en ville is a 1982 French musical drama film written and directed by Jacques Demy, with music by Michel Colombier, and starring Dominique Sanda, Danielle Darrieux and Michel Piccoli. It is set against the backdrop of a workers' strike in 1955 Nantes. Like Demy's most famous film, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, it is an operetta-musical in which every line of dialogue is sung. However, unlike Cherbourg, Chambre is closer to tragedy, with a darker, more explicitly political tone.

<i>Catherine</i> (1986 TV series) 1986 French television series based on the novels by Juliette Benzoni

Catherine, il suffit d'un amour was a French television series produced by Antenne 2 in 1986 and based on the Catherine novels written by best-selling French author Juliette Benzoni. The adaptation remained similar to the original text of Juliette Benzoni's story about Catherine and her adventures in France during the 15th century.

<i>The Round Up</i> (2010 film) 2010 French film

The Round Up is a 2010 French historical war drama film written and directed by Roselyne Bosch and produced by Alain Goldman. The film stars Mélanie Laurent, Jean Reno, Sylvie Testud and Gad Elmaleh. Based on the true story of a young Jewish boy, the film depicts the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup, the mass arrest of Jews by French police who were accomplices of Nazi Germans in Paris in July 1942.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nadine de Rothschild</span> French writer and actor

Nadine de Rothschild is a French author and former actress. She is the widow of banker Edmond Adolphe de Rothschild, a member of the Rothschild family.

A French Woman is a 1995 French drama film directed by Régis Wargnier.

<i>A Woman at Her Window</i> 1976 French film

A Woman at Her Window is a 1976 French drama film directed by Pierre Granier-Deferre, starring Romy Schneider, Philippe Noiret, Victor Lanoux and Umberto Orsini. Based on the 1929 novel Hotel Acropolis by Pierre Drieu La Rochelle, it tells the story of a woman who helps a union leader sought by police in 1930s Greece.

Anne Gravoin is a French concert violinist and music entrepreneur.

C'est la vie is a semi-autobiographical 1990 French drama written and directed by Diane Kurys. Like Peppermint Soda, Cocktail Molotov, and Entre Nous the plot revisits the theme of divorce and its effects. Set in the French beach resort of La Baule-les-Pins in the summer of 1958, it is mainly narrated in voice-over from the thirteen-year-old Frédérique's diary.

The Most Assassinated Woman in the World is a 2018 French mystery thriller and the debut feature film directed and produced by Franck Ribière. It stars Anna Mouglalis, Niels Schneider, Eric Godon, Sissi Duparc, André Wilms, Michel Fau. The leading lady of Grand Guignol Theatre in Paris, Paula Maxa, is known for being murdered in every show on stage. Someone starts to notice that there's a link between these murders and a series of murders in real-life. The film is the first Belgian movie made for Netflix. It was shot in a 1.85 : 1 screen ratio through Spherical lens. It is loosely inspired by the work and life of actual French actress Paula Maxa. Filmed over the course of a month and a half on an estimated budget of €4,500,000, the film was released straight to Netflix after a premiere at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival in April 2018.

References

  1. "Pour une femme (2013)". Jpbox-office.com. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  2. "For a Woman". Box Office Mojo . Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  3. "Diane Kurys directs Pour une femme". Cineuropa.org. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  4. "Pour une femme". Unifrance.org. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  5. "Pour une Femme". Cinenews.be. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  6. "For A Woman (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  7. "For a Woman". Metacritic.
  8. van Hoeij, Boyd (12 July 2013). "For a Woman (Pour une femme): Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  9. Pfefferman, Naomi (4 June 2014). "Filmmaker Plumbs Her Painful Family Secrets in 'For a Woman' — Jewish Journal". Jewishjournal.com. Retrieved 29 September 2017.