'Summer Hours' reviewpick

A small French film with a mighty impact

By Geoff Berkshire

Metromix
May 14, 2009

 
Critic's Rating:
4 1/2

'Summer Hours' review
Jérémie Renier, Juliette Binoche and Charles Berling (Credit: Jeannick Gravelines/IFC)
Dominique Reymond as Lisa and Charles Berling as Frederic in "Summer Hours." (L-R) Charles Berling as Frederic, Juliette Binoche as Adrienne and Dominique Reymond as Lisa in "Summer Hours." (L-R) Edith Scob as Helene and Juliette Binoche as Adrienne in "Summer Hours." (L-R) Jeremie Renier as Jeremie and Charles Berling as Frederic in "Summer Hours." The cast of "Summer Hours."
Summer Hours
Running time:
102 minutes
Cast:
Juliette Binoche -
Adrienne
Charles Berling -
Frederic
Jérémie Renier -
Jeremie
Édith Scob -
Helene
Dominique Reymond -
Lisa
Director:
Olivier Assayas
Genre:
Drama
Overall User Rating:
4 (7 ratings)
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Three grown siblings—Adrienne (Juliette Binoche), Frédéric (Charles Berling) and Jérémie (Jérémie Renier)—reunite each summer for the birthday of their seventysomething mother Hélène (the impeccable Edith Scob). But this summer will be the last. Hélène dies not long after, and the siblings must decide how to divide up her estate, including some impressive museum pieces.

The buzz: French filmmaker Oliver Assayas is always unpredictable, though his more recent work has tended toward the bombastic, including cyber sex thriller "Demonlover" and globetrotting noir "Boarding Gate." His films almost always make it to the U.S., and "Summer Hours" has the added bonus of Binoche—one of the few French actresses who can practically guarantee an international release.

The verdict: What is it that unites a family? What role do possessions play in our lives? What do they mean to the people we leave behind when we die? How are memories made, forgotten, reclaimed? Who the hell put that desk in the museum? These are some of the many questions raised by the dazzlingly beautiful "Summer Hours," a film small in scale but not in impact. Yes, the movie is talky, plotless and French, with characters who appreciate fine art. And yet in place of the stuffy, elitist affair one might expect is a work of universal wisdom. Be patient with the film, let it sink in, and you'll be rewarded. Filmmakers rarely capture the passage of time as elegantly and powerfully as Assayas does here, and his achievement is all the more pleasurable because it's so unassuming. There's no grandstanding or pretension or self-importance on display as Assayas focuses on the joyous, mundane and heartbreaking moments that occur as a family comes together and drifts apart. "Summer Hours" is a true work of art.

Did you know? "Summer Hours" is the second film to emerge from a project initiated by the Musée d'Orsay in Paris to celebrate its 20th anniversary. The first, "Flight of the Red Balloon," also featured Binoche.

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What other people are saying...

saraht - May 22, 2009 at 11:54 AM

This movie is fantastic. I saw it a few months ago at BAM as a NY sneak preview and was blown away. It drags at parts (particularly the museum aspe...

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REDAWN - May 21, 2009 at 8:07 PM

I love french films, especially with Juliette Binoche! I think that she is such a true woman with a quality of compassion and humanity that every w...

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