52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 33. SKY (Director: Fabienne Berthaud)
If there is one country where being a woman film director
isn’t problematic, it is France. According to chartsbin.com France produces 240
feature films per year, including co-productions. Somewhere between 10% and 20%
are directed by women. How popular are they? Fortunately, I love statistics
(figures for French release only):
Connasse, Princesse
des coeurs (Directors: Eloïse Lang, Noémie Saglio) – released 29 April
2015, 1,134,372 admissions
Le Grand Partage
(The Roommates Party) (Director: Alexandra Leclère) – released 23 December
2015, 1,050,699 admissions (to 19 January 2016 only)
Lolo (Director:
Julie Delpy) – released 28 October 2015, 857,103 admissions (to 24 November
2015)
La Tête Haute (Director:
Emmanuelle Bercot) – released 13 May 2015, 642,379 admissions
Josephine s’arrondit
(Director: Marilou Berry) – released 10 February 2016, 627,828 admissions (to
23 February 2016 only)
Mon Roi (Director:
Maiwenn) – released 21 October 2015, 615,784 admissions (to 10 November 2015
only)
Ange & Gabrielle
(Director: Anne Giafferi) – released 11 November 2015, 419,316 admissions (to 1
December 2015 only)
Mustang (Director:
Deniz Gamze Ergüven) – released 17 June 2015, 217,303 admissions
Les Innocentes (Director:
Anne Fontaine) – released 10 February 2016, 182,733 admissions (1st
week of release only)
Qui c’est les plus
forts? (Director: Charlotte De Turckheim) – released 3 June 2015, 147,331
admissions (to 16 June 2015 only)
Le Dernier Leçon (The
Final Lesson) (Director: Pascale Pouzadoux) – released 4 November 2015, 105,324
admissions (1st week of release only)
L’Avenir (Things
to Come) (Director: Mia Hansen-Løve) – released 6 April 2016, 102,832
admissions (1st week of release only)
Arrête Ton Cinéma
(Director: Diane Kurys) – released 13 January 2016, 83,248 admissions (1st
week of release only)
Et Ta Soeur
(Director: Marion Vernoux) – released 13 January 2016, 81,813 admission (1st
week of release only)
Maryland
(Director: Alice Winocour) – released 30 September 2015, 67,537 admissions
Bang Gang: A Modern
Love Story (Director Eva Husson) – released 13 January 2016, 29,341
admissions
Le Coeur régulier
(Director: Vanja D’Alcantara) – released 30 March 2016, no details
Les Ogres
(Director: Léa Fehner) – released 16 March 2016, no details
Évolution
(Director: Lucile Hadzihalilovic) – released 16 March 2016, no details
Suite Amoricaine (Director:
Pascale Breton) – released 9 March 2016, no details
Solange et les
vivants (Director: Ina
Mihalache) – released 9 March 2016, no details
Mon sac est prêt, mes
pompes aussi (Director: Jeanne Quibel) – released 17 February 2016, no
details
Crache Coeur
(Director: Julia Kowalski) – released 17 February 2016, no details
Peur de Rien (aka
Parisienne) (Director: Danielle Arbid) – released 10 February 2016, no details
These 24 films (approximately 10% of French output) do not
constitute a complete list of French-produced films directed by women released
in a twelve month period. They illustrate the frequency that such films are
released in French cinemas. In other words, unlike in many countries, USA and
UK included, French cinema has a good story to tell.
French women directors don’t have to make the case for their
right to make movies in terms of financial success. Taken for their domestic
box office alone, many of them do not recoup their production budget. The most
successful ones tend to be comedies, evidenced by Connasse, Princesse des coeurs, the most popular film on the list.
But these films enjoy a life on DVD, cable television (Canal Plus) and
streaming services, so their cinema release is not the end of the story.
This brings me to Sky,
the third collaboration between writer-director Fabienne Berthaud and star
Diane Kruger, after Frankie in 2005
and Lily Sometimes (Pieds Nus Sur Les Limaces) in 2010. Each
film is remarkably different from the last. Sky,
which opened in France on 6 April 2016, is a road movie about a marriage that
figuratively runs out of gas. Romy (Diane Kruger) and her husband Richard
(Gilles Lellouche) cannot have children. Romy likes to photograph things and
suggested the trip. Neither is particularly stimulated. After Richard gets
drunk and flirts with a local singer and her friend in a bar – his charm takes
a while to wear out – he attempts to have sex with Romy. She defends herself,
deals what she thinks is a killer blow and then goes on the run, buying a car
for $1,000. After briefly being a fugitive, she turns herself in, is
interviewed by a detective (Joshua Jackson, Kruger’s real-life husband) then
discovers that her husband is alive. She gives him the car (not much of a
parting gift, but I expect the beat up vehicle represents their marriage) and
heads for Las Vegas, where she makes friends with ‘bunny girl’ Charlene
(Laurene Landon) who allows her to stay as long as she puts $40 in the kitty and
even allows Romy to borrow her bunny outfit. Romy is supposed to pose with
passers-by in their photographs for $20 a pop, sandwiched between two tired
Elvis-dressalikes but she is insufficiently fun. She ends up in a casino
heading for the restroom, catching the eye of Diego (Norman Reedus), a park ranger
who avoids permanent relationships. Diego offers Romy money to sleep with him.
She refuses but hangs out with him anyway. This is by way of a fresh start.
The film is mainly about the roundabout way a woman travels
to fill the hole in her life. Romy cannot have children – she miscarried when
pregnant with her first child and has flashbacks to the event. Photography is
simply a hobby, not anything she is serious about. She finds herself like many
immigrants making a new life – and doubtless violating the terms of her
visitor’s visa. ‘A lot of people round here can’t find work. You waltz in and
get a job,’ Diego’s sister-in-law Billie (Lena Dunham) remarks after Romy
starts waitressing. Is it simply Romy’s exoticism that makes her employable –
she adds her cooking to the menu at a small town diner? Or that she attracts
sympathy as a fish out of water. Romy is undoubtedly not a victim and makes a
series of choices based on her feelings.
The title is Romy’s Indian name, given to her by the family
of her colleague, Missy (Q’orianka Kilcher). The storyline is predictable but
the relationship between Romy and Diego has unexpected details – Diego leaves
out gallon jugs of water for Mexican immigrants making their way into America in
order that they don’t die of thirst, the number one fate of illegals. Diego is
entirely resistant to having a permanent female companion and when Romy gives
him another piece of news, he gets mighty mad. But there is tenderness –
Berthaud doesn’t lapse into two-dimensional caricature.
One of the film’s most shocking aspects is seeing Girls writer-director Lena Dunham
playing what is disparagingly known as trailer trash, with a missing tooth that
she chooses not to get fixed. Billie’s husband complains she is a dumpster
diver, living off foodstuffs close to their expiry dates. At one point Billie
performs a cheer-leading song on a trampoline and Romy flips out –Billie is
expecting another child. Romy’s inner pain is revealed to others for the first
time.
Sky falls into a
sub-category of women’s films that deals with faulty wombs, the inability to
bear healthy children. It is disappointing that Berthaud applies an
unscientific solution to her character’s problem. Women unable to have children
are rarely expressing a metaphorical state – ‘I’m barren because my
relationship is stale’. I think Berthaud should have presented this issue with
more realism.
So Sky is a film
about the American Dream that is also a bit of a fairy tale. It isn’t all roses
at the bottom of the garden – Diego suffers from exposure to depleted uranium.
But Berthaud does fall for the American Myth that lives can be re-made in the
Big Country. French audiences might not be impressed.
Reviewed at IFC
Center, 6th Avenue at 3rd Street, New York City, New
York, Monday 18 April 2016
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