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Synopsis

“I’ve loved you ever since we first met, and I will love you till the day I die.” England in the year 1905. Angel Deverell is an extremely talented young writer from a working-class background. Her escapist, romantic novels are hugely popular. Before long all the dreams of a young woman of her age are fulfilled. But is it possible to have success, fame and love all at the same time? Her radiant rise is followed, inexorably, by her decline…

François Ozon’s film is based on a novel published in 1957 by British writer Elizabeth Taylor (1912-1975). Ozon encountered Angel about five years ago: "I sensed immediately that a screen adaptation of the book would provide me with an opportunity to deal with an entire romantic universe; it would also give me a pretext to create a broadly sweeping epic in the style of melodramas of the 30s and 40s, revolving around the rise and fall of a flamboyant personality. And then I fell in love with the character of Angel, who I found amusing, fascinating and finally, deeply touching. In the book, the protagonist often appears grotesque; Elizabeth Taylor’s treatment of Angel – her writing and her behaviour – is very ironic. I didn’t think it possible to follow a figure in such a negative light for two hours; it is important to be charmed by her as well. Scarlett O’Hara immediately sprung to mind, a figure who, as the English say, you love and hate at the same time. –Berlinale

Director

Original

François Ozon

One of the most provocative and vibrant filmmakers to emerge during the 1990s, French director François Ozon has distinguished himself with dark, mordantly psychological films that draw their impact from Ozon’s frank and often disturbing explorations of transgression and sexuality. Combining wry humor, sensitivity, and subversive insight with a talent for manipulation, Ozon has earned comparisons to Hitchcock and Chabrol, directors whose works have provided ample inspiration for the young director as he has staked out his own, impressive territory in the cinema. Born in Paris in 1967, Ozon became interested in filmmaking at a young age. The son of bourgeois intellectuals, he was influenced by such Hollywood-based European directors as Hitchcock, Max Ophuls, and Jean Renoir, and also found great inspiration in the films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder (one of Fassbinder’s early plays would later inspire Ozon’s Water Drops on Burning Rocks). After earning a master’s degree in cinema, Ozon… read more

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fakebook (Tom)

2Jul11

Not his best effort but you've got to admire Ozon's willingness to fully embody the ludicrous imagination, and resolute verve, of a hopelessly romantic writer in a neo-Technicolor melodrama. (I loved the clumsy use of rear-screen projections, by the way.) I'll take Ozon's imagination and humor over Todd Haynes any day.

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jxdelavallee

24Jun11

is anybody who rates this low aware it's *supposed* to be awful? purposely-done kitsch? a recreation of angel's cheesy "romantic" imagination? i thought that was brilliant--just saying.

Jordany and 3 others like this

Olivicat, Noiresque, Louise_Dietrich

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Katie

5Jun11

what a massive selfish bitch.

Christina

18Apr11

Reminiscent of a lifetime movie. Beautiful cast though.

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