In her feature début, co-writer and director Mia Hansen-Løve takes advantage of the freedom to link apparently random moments from the life of a disintegrating young family into an intense and naturally acted drama.. The story is easily explained. A young father and would-be poet is on drugs and gives his wife no other choice than to leave him with their little daughter. After 11 years without contact with her father, the daughter finds out that he has been living close by all the time and they meet again. There are a few small and large climaxes in the development, but these form more of an obvious framework around which the everyday vicissitudes acquire depth, than dramatic high points. Together with the often restrained performing style of the actors, this ensures a striking and calm rhythm that gives the film a signature of its own. The tight framing and occasionally Impressionistic cutting ensure an almost painterly quality, that thanks to the credible scenes does not degenerate into superficial prettiness. The Austrian-French mix of characters and the striking soundtrack including Scottish songs lift All Is Forgiven above a typically Parisian epic and make the film into a refined, profligate analysis of impotence and blood bonds.
Film details
Productieland
France
Jaar
2007
Festivaleditie
IFFR 2008
Lengte
105'
Medium/Formaat
35mm
Taal
French, German
Première status
None
Director
Mia Hansen-Løve
Producer
David Thion
Principal cast
Olivia Ross, Paul Blain, Marie-Christine Friedrich