The Nature of Love (3/10)
by Tony Medley
112 Minutes.
NR.
This is apparently intended to be a romcom, but
director/scriptwriter Monia Chokri has a much different definition of
both comedy and romance than I. Sophia (Magalie Lépine-londeau) in an
apparently happy 10-year marriage to Xavier (Francis-William Rhéaume)
when she meets a sexy contractor, Sylvain (Pierre-Yves Cardinal) and
falls for him. Chokri tries to say she falls in love, but it looks more
like falling in sex.
With no seeming guilt, she pursues a relationship
with him. Chokri apparently has no empathy with the cuckolded Xavier,
who is almost immediately discarded from the story. There is no mention
of how he reacts to his wife running of with another man. Chokri’s
ignoring this part of the story shows a low appreciation of the effects
of betrayal and unfaithfulness.
The film satisfies all the woke requirements of
today’s moviemaking. Near the end it throws in a gay character and a
black character, neither of whom has any relationship to the story. They
are just there to check off those two boxes.
Another minus, from my POV, is the fact that the
two main characters smoke. Back in the day all the cigarette companies
paid to have characters in movies smoke, encouraging the impressionable
audiences to smoke, leading to millions of addictions and deaths from
nicotine. Hollywood cut back on this for a while but now smoking is
beginning to reappear in films. I can only guess that there must have
been some financial considerations to have the characters both light up
during the film. As far as I’m concerned that’s unacceptable and
deplorable.
If this is supposed to be about “love,” that’s not
what came across to me. Every time they slobbered over each other and
made goo-goo eyes, I thought about how weak and selfish the two were. I
squirmed when they were making passionate love, thinking about poor
Xavier. But here’s how Chokri rationalizes her bland treatment of
unfaithfulness and adultery:
At first, she tells
herself it’s just a one-night stand. She’d had a few drinks, he’s sexy
enough, it won’t mean anything. Half the people in relationships I know
have had at least one fling. To quote Sophia: “I don’t know any faithful
couples.” It happens all the time, but we never talk about it. The
subject is taboo. The word “faithfulness” is still a Judeo-Christian
norm. A heavy burden. I think we should talk about “loyalty” instead. My
mother said that, for her, cheating was not about having sex with
someone else. It was when you start to feel close to the person in
question. I thought this was a fair assessment... But after a certain
age, sex and intimacy are intrinsically tied.
So much for morality. As to “comedy,” I didn’t see
anything in the film that was remotely humorous. So, it’s not romantic
and it’s not funny. What’s the point? In French.
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