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‘Love Me Tender' Review: Vicky Krieps Ignites an Elegant and Moving Portrait of Motherhood at Odds With Selfhood
‘Love Me Tender' Review: Vicky Krieps Ignites an Elegant and Moving Portrait of Motherhood at Odds With Selfhood

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘Love Me Tender' Review: Vicky Krieps Ignites an Elegant and Moving Portrait of Motherhood at Odds With Selfhood

Even in supposedly enlightened societies it is practically an article of faith that a woman's identity as a mother must supercede all her other identities. Not only that: any woman not willing to sacrifice all the other love in her life for the love of her child is unnatural, an aberration and the ultimate taboo: a bad mother. Anna Cazenave Cambet's sweeping, moving 'Love Me Tender,' based on the semi-autobiographical novel by Constance Debré, aims at the heart of this pervasive ideology of hypocrisy and unreachably high expectations, and largely thanks to a rivetingly radiant Vicky Krieps, hits its mark with painful accuracy. The paths to what is socially deemed success as a mother are few and narrow and heavily policed, but there are a million ways to fail. Krieps, lean and rangy in T-shirts and denim, plays Clémence, a divorced writer who used to be a lawyer, and amicably shares custody of her eight-year-old son Paul (Viggo Ferreira-Redier) with her ex-husband Laurent (Antoine Reinartz, so memorable as the prosecuting attorney in 'Anatomy of a Fall.') We're introduced to a contented and excited Clémence who seems in the wake of major self-revelation. At the pool one day she swims her laps, casually hooks up with a woman in her changing cabin, then emerges to a sunny Parisia day and phones her kid. He asks her how far she swam today. In a little ritual between them, she shows him the sky. More from Variety Vicky Krieps, Christian Friedel Join Aimee Lou Wood, Johnny Flynn in Malgorzata Szumowska, Michal Englert's 'The Idiots' Vicky Krieps Has Yet to Recover From Cannes Custody Drama 'Love Me Tender': 'This Film Pushed Me to My Limit' Vicky Krieps' 'Love Me Tender' Boarded by Be For Films Ahead of Cannes Un Certain Regard Premiere (EXCLUSIVE) DP Kristy Baboul's warm, loose camera swirls around her as a classical viola plays — some days are just good days — but Clémence has not yet told Laurent (let alone Paul) that she's seeing women now. So she arranges a meeting with her ex in a familiar cafe and breaks the news, trusting of his reaction, confident in his understanding. In fact, it's almost funny, the way it plays out, with Laurent's fake ok-with-it response followed by an inordinately long pull on his drink. But later, in retrospect, we'll understand the undercurrents in that clever scene, and wonder if Clémence's lighthearted demeanor, and her friendly but firm rebuff of the pass Laurent makes at her later, are what causes his unthinkable bitterness to brew. Because Clémence's newfound sexual freedom obscurely rouses Laurent to inflict the most vindictive ongoing revenge on her. First simply keeping Paul from her, lawyer Laurent then gets the courts involved, filing spurious allegations of the ugliest kind in a successful bid to get her custody suspended entirely. The damage this will do to Paul never seems to be a factor. Here the film, like Clémence's life, forks into two: One part of her carries on her professional, personal and romantic life, the other takes on the near-full-time job of fighting through a legal quagmire to have her maternal rights restored. Even though all involved understand she is blameless, the tortuous process drags on to the extent that she will not see Paul for 18 months, or as she says in voiceover (sparingly but eloquently excerpted from the work of autofiction Clémence is writing) 'two of her birthdays, one of his.' Even then, she is restricted to brief sessions under supervision by a social worker(Aurélia Petit). 'Can I hold him on my lap?' she begs, and the ensuing embrace is a heartbreaking relief, but far from the end of the story. At over two hours, 'Love Me Tender' feels a little too long, especially once Clémence's relationship with journalist Sarah (Monia Chokri) gets more serious. Chokri is slightly miscast and their relationship, despite a nicely frank sex scene involving the practiced use of a strap-on, is less convincing in its chemistry than, say, Clémence's nightclub hookup with Victoire (an underused Park Ji-min from 'Return to Seoul'). But time spent hanging out with Clémence and her flatmate Leo (Julien de Saint-Jean), or her father (Féofor Atkine) cannot feel wasted when Krieps' inhabitation of the role is so complete. It's an enormous, generous performance, even her body language changes — slinky and nonchalant when circling a new lover, loose-limbed and girlish when relaxing with friends, and tight and compressed in that horrible mediation room, her burners on low, her expression concentrated like she's willing her heart to slow its beat. After this year's excellent 'We Believe You' from Belgium and 2023's 'All to Play For' starring a terrific Virginie Efira, Francophone dramas following mothers embroiled in family court custody disputes are having quite a moment. 'Love Me Tender' is a notable addition to the trend, for Krieps, but also for its sorrowful but stirring ending: Clémence makes a transgressive, devastatingly difficult decision, into which is woven the slenderest hope that, as we learn to appreciate loving mothers who are also complicated women, it may one day not seem so very transgressive at all. Best of Variety The Best Albums of the Decade

Cannes Film Festival bans nudity on the red carpet. What does it mean for the ‘naked' dress?
Cannes Film Festival bans nudity on the red carpet. What does it mean for the ‘naked' dress?

CNN

time12-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CNN

Cannes Film Festival bans nudity on the red carpet. What does it mean for the ‘naked' dress?

Over the last few years, one styling trend has dominated the red carpet circuit more plainly than any other in recent memory. The 'naked' dress — a gown built on the suggestion of exposing its wearer's nudity — quickly revealed itself as a surefire way for celebrities to grab headlines and has therefore enjoyed full-frontal support from a number of those in show business. But any celebrity stylist bound for the South of France hoping to enlist the powerful tools of chiffon or sheer lace will need to think again after an amendment was spotted in the Cannes Film Festival dress code just 24-hours ahead of the event's grand opening this Tuesday. According to the organizer's website, 'nudity is prohibited on the red carpet, as well as any other area of the festival.' The decision, which will have a direct impact on the ever-growing 'naked' dress trend, has been taken 'for decency reasons,' it added. It's fair to say, this year's Cannes red carpet will look drastically different. Just last year, model Bella Hadid arrived in a sandy-brown Saint Laurent number with a completely sheer halter-neck top. Also by Saint Laurent was photographer Nadia Lee Cohen's slinky see-through knit dress worn to the premiere of the film 'The Shrouds.' A few days later, actress Vicky Krieps went for a transparent boudoir-themed Armani Privé gown. It's unclear, however, if any of these dresses would be permitted at this year's festivities, given they reveal varying degrees of undress. In fact, 'naked' dresses are not created equal — at least not equally exposing. Instead of providing clarity and guidance around sartorial choices, the added clause in Cannes' dress code potentially raises more questions. What is their definition of nudity? Would a printed image of a birthday suit, such as those found on Jean-Paul Gaultier's dresses from the 1990s, breach the new dress code? Or does nakedness only resonate in 3D? Is nudity regarded holistically, or does a flashed nipple — a la Florence Pugh in hot pink Valentino — risk entry refusal to the Croisette? Related vertical-video A-List celebs shine on met gala red carpet The updated guidance — which is one of two major changes to the dress code, alongside a ban on 'voluminous' outfits with a large train (sorry, Diana Ross) — may have been influenced not just by the ubiquity of such dresses, but extreme cases that overshadowed the events to which they were worn. Earlier this year, Bianca Censori raised the stakes on barely-there frocks when she donned a piece of translucent netting to the Grammys alongside her husband Ye. Forgoing underwear, and arguably any artistic flourish, the outfit seemed to mark a new era of the trend — where the power of suggestion had been thwarted by the blunt force of shock value. For Cannes Film Festival organizers, it's the kind of exhibitionism they would rather keep on the beach and off their red carpet.

Cannes Film Festival bans nudity on the red carpet. What does it mean for the ‘naked' dress?
Cannes Film Festival bans nudity on the red carpet. What does it mean for the ‘naked' dress?

CNN

time12-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CNN

Cannes Film Festival bans nudity on the red carpet. What does it mean for the ‘naked' dress?

Over the last few years, one styling trend has dominated the red carpet circuit more plainly than any other in recent memory. The 'naked' dress — a gown built on the suggestion of exposing its wearer's nudity — quickly revealed itself as a surefire way for celebrities to grab headlines and has therefore enjoyed full-frontal support from a number of those in show business. But any celebrity stylist bound for the South of France hoping to enlist the powerful tools of chiffon or sheer lace will need to think again after an amendment was spotted in the Cannes Film Festival dress code just 24-hours ahead of the event's grand opening this Tuesday. According to the organizer's website, 'nudity is prohibited on the red carpet, as well as any other area of the festival.' The decision, which will have a direct impact on the ever-growing 'naked' dress trend, has been taken 'for decency reasons,' it added. It's fair to say, this year's Cannes red carpet will look drastically different. Just last year, model Bella Hadid arrived in a sandy-brown Saint Laurent number with a completely sheer halter-neck top. Also by Saint Laurent was photographer Nadia Lee Cohen's slinky see-through knit dress worn to the premiere of the film 'The Shrouds.' A few days later, actress Vicky Krieps went for a transparent boudoir-themed Armani Privé gown. It's unclear, however, if any of these dresses would be permitted at this year's festivities, given they reveal varying degrees of undress. In fact, 'naked' dresses are not created equal — at least not equally exposing. Instead of providing clarity and guidance around sartorial choices, the added clause in Cannes' dress code potentially raises more questions. What is their definition of nudity? Would a printed image of a birthday suit, such as those found on Jean-Paul Gaultier's dresses from the 1990s, breach the new dress code? Or does nakedness only resonate in 3D? Is nudity regarded holistically, or does a flashed nipple — a la Florence Pugh in hot pink Valentino — risk entry refusal to the Croisette? Related vertical-video A-List celebs shine on met gala red carpet The updated guidance — which is one of two major changes to the dress code, alongside a ban on 'voluminous' outfits with a large train (sorry, Diana Ross) — may have been influenced not just by the ubiquity of such dresses, but extreme cases that overshadowed the events to which they were worn. Earlier this year, Bianca Censori raised the stakes on barely-there frocks when she donned a piece of translucent netting to the Grammys alongside her husband Ye. Forgoing underwear, and arguably any artistic flourish, the outfit seemed to mark a new era of the trend — where the power of suggestion had been thwarted by the blunt force of shock value. For Cannes Film Festival organizers, it's the kind of exhibitionism they would rather keep on the beach and off their red carpet.

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