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Barbara

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France · 2017
Rated PG · 1h 38m
Director Mathieu Amalric
Starring Jeanne Balibar, Mathieu Amalric, Vincent Peirani, Aurore Clément
Genre Drama, Music

A young actress named Brigitte is preparing for the role of the famous French singer, Barbara. The more she studies and mimics the singer's gestures, manners, and intonation, the more she merges with the character. As the director too prepares for the filming, he becomes enchanted by the singer, or perhaps with her new incarnation.

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What are critics saying?

60

The Guardian by

Once you settle into your bewilderment, however, Barbara an oddly alluring film that does a double backflip on hokey showbiz-bio convention: not an informative introduction to the singer by any means, but a suitably eccentric evocation of her creative essence.

75

Slant Magazine by Chuck Bowen

In Barbara, the process of filmmaking is shown to be a nesting series of shells that allow one to be simultaneously freed and lost.

70

Screen International by Dan Fainaru

This is a loving tribute not only to the late Barbara (1930-97), the inimitable singing icon of the French chanson, but also to the star of this film, Jeanne Balibar, whose brilliant performance is boosted here by her uncanny physical resemblance to the late“Dame en noir”, as Barbara used to be called by her admirers.

90

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

It’s a film of scenes rather than of one unified narrative, but each scene is a showcase for the magnificent talents of Ms. Balibar, a multifaceted performer of spectacular magnetism and intelligence.

70

Variety by Jay Weissberg

The movie lightly plumbs that dangerously unsettled space between performing and literally being the protagonist in a biopic.

50

The Playlist by Nikola Grozdanovic

Amalric puts all of the esoteric artistic tendencies that are part and parcel of the creative process into “Barbara” and comes up with an incoherent mess of a docu-drama. The entire film feels like a playful experiment that never evolves beyond a concept, like an unlit cigarette, never getting the spark it needs to fulfill its purpose.

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