Los Angeles Times

A mere ‘Souvenir’ of her better times

Isabelle Huppert once again radiates steely allure, but this tale is glossy nonsense.

- By Robert Abele calendar@latimes.com

Isabelle Huppert as a has-been chanteuse is all a film fan should need to stoke the wanna-see factor for “Souvenir,” and it probably doesn’t hurt that there’s a May-December romance as an extra incentive for devotees of the magnetic French superstar.

But promise is all one’s left with after Belgian director Bavo Defurne’s melodramat­ic trifle plays itself out, leaving the distinct impression that a richer vein of regret, renewal and consequenc­e was passed over for a more superficia­l, though highly stylized admiration of Huppert’s image-seizing gifts.

Not that there aren’t sporadic pleasures in store for the star’s completist­s — a seasoned gesture here, a well-timed tear there and the steely beauty of her ageless gaze. But it’s not enough to save “Souvenir” from the sense that without her anchoring presence, this movie would float away.

Her serenely lonely Liliane is almost a parody figure in the establishi­ng scenes: a food factory worker in cap and smock during the day, garnishing tubs of prepackage­d pâté with bay leaves and dried berries, and at home a silk-robed liqueur sipper perched on her sofa watching trivia game shows.

Both Liliane’s spotless, blue-tiled workspace and the elegantly dimmed, earth tones of her modestly decorated home are like attempts at environmen­tal imprisonme­nt in the vein of Douglas Sirk movies. But Defurne’s rigorously symmetrica­l shots, dutifully executed by cinematogr­apher Philippe Guilbert, feel more antiseptic than evocative.

We learn about who Liliane was when a new temp employee — aspiring lightweigh­t boxer Jean (Kévin Azaïs) — recognizes her as a singer named Laura who enjoyed brief fame competing in a televised European singing contest (think Eurovision) before quickly fading into obscurity. (She lost the prize to ABBA, we’re told.)

Though initially put off by the handsome 21-year-old co-worker’s admiring queries, Liliane befriends Jean, then agrees to his plea to sing at a party for his sports club, even after his obliviousl­y less-than-flattering caveat, “We were going to get a magician.”

Spurred by renewed attention and emboldened by becoming lovers with Jean, Liliane entertains the notion of a comeback, with Jean ready to quit the ring and become her manager.

This is when “Souvenir” starts to unravel as a story, as a fantastica­l dream of love and ambition, and even as a piece about the healing power of music. For one thing, the age difference spice of Liliane’s and Jean’s affair is undercut by how immaturely zipless Jean is as a character.

Azaïs is either goofy smiles or petulant moping, so the job of persuading us that there is any spark between these two falls to Huppert. She’s not helped by the deflating energy of the film’s second half . Even she can’t sell the romantic stakes of this weak coupling, which is predictabl­y threatened by the reemergenc­e of the songwritin­g impresario (Johan Leysen) who dumped Liliane years ago, but who agrees to write a new song for her.

Then there’s Huppert’s curiously expression-deficient, mannered singing, which has a certain Frenchifie­d allure as anti-pop performanc­e art cabaret. It could make for an archly amusing music video but doesn’t pass muster for a fairy tale yarn about a forgotten star’s reemergenc­e in a national spotlight.

Also, the songs, by Portland’s Europop-jazz confection­ers Pink Martini, are slight things that tickle more than evoke musical passion, although there’s a slight chance you’ll have Huppert’s huskily chanted “Je dis OUI!” in your ears for a while afterward.

One of the reasons “Souvenir” is such a singular disappoint­ment is because Defurne’s debut, “North Sea Texas,” was such a finely tuned coming-of-age film, its visual elegance and emotions well-synched.

“Souvenir,” on the other hand, is glossy nonsense, its legendary star mostly an entrancing ornament. The title surely means more for Defurne’s casting fortune than our viewing enjoyment.

 ?? Fabrizio Maltese Strand Releasing ?? WILL Isabelle Huppert’s Liliane find renewal and passion with Kévin Azaïs’ Jean?
Fabrizio Maltese Strand Releasing WILL Isabelle Huppert’s Liliane find renewal and passion with Kévin Azaïs’ Jean?

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