The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Unfortunately lacks much in the way of compelling narrative or credible characterizations, but it once again reaffirms Huppert's place in the pantheon of French film actors.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France · 2002
1h 33m
Director Olivier Dahan
Starring Isabelle Huppert, Pascal Greggory, Maud Forget, Fabienne Babe
Genre Drama
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
Sylvie is a hooker whose illegitimate daughter commits a crime. She and her daughter flee to find Sylvie's first love in the countryside. The daughter is trying to get to know her unwilling mother. Along the way, the two meet a male fugitive and bond with each other.
We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.
The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Unfortunately lacks much in the way of compelling narrative or credible characterizations, but it once again reaffirms Huppert's place in the pantheon of French film actors.
The only conceivable reason to immerse oneself in this inexplicable release is, of course, Huppert. Gravely, she accepts the challenge of delivering a coherent performance in a wildly incoherent role.
New York Daily News by Jami Bernard
Even Isabelle Huppert Lite is more profound than the best work of most other actresses.
This is a rare road picture that leaves us knowing less about our traveling companions than we did when the journey started; Dahan and screenwriter Agnes Fustier-Dahan reduce their characters to pasteboard symbols, colored by unexplained quirks.
Huppert's mastery aside, this is a European Art Film writ large, complete with classical music, gorgeously filmed landscapes, expository voiceovers, poetic transitions and only a ghost's footprint of a story.
La Vie Promise's style is too slick for the subject matter.
This amazing tour-de-force presents Huppert in a role, which is equal parts abrasive and vulnerable, exasperating and pathetic, monstrous and saintly.
Outside of Sylvia, none of the characters has any real presence or personality in a movie that takes greater interest in shots of pretty flowers than in the human beings onscreen, and in which nearly every major plot turn is the result of blind chance.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
Expressive touches are finally inadequate. Ms. Huppert's hard work notwithstanding, they don't take the place of psychological texture and narrative weight.
You have to hand it to Huppert. She doesn't let the hokey plot and syrupy cinematography (what's with those repeated shots of flowers blowing in the wind?) keep her from giving a profound performance.
A classic spy thriller about an everyman and his beautiful accomplice on a mission to save England.
A mistaken shipment of ecstasy pills causes chaos in the life of an aging Danish drug dealer named Milo.
A misunderstood girl's life changes when she is befriended by the nicest boy in school.
University student Young-Seok becomes enamored with Josée, a strange, imaginative woman who lives in a book-filled house.