Los Angeles Times

‘Cold Water’

The artful, romantic and rebellious ‘Cold Water’ finally gets the release it deserves.

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC justin.chang@latimes.com Twitter: @JustinCCha­ng

Olivier Assayas’ 1994 French youth drama finally gets its U.S. release

There are a few different meanings for the title of the 1994 French youth drama “Cold Water,” an early triumph for the writer-director Olivier Assayas that is only now receiving a proper U.S. theatrical release.

An intimate, enveloping tale of romance and rebellion set in 1972, the film opens in a suburb near Paris but soon follows its 16-yearold characters into the wilderness, eventually coming to rest alongside a rushing river — an unforced metaphor for the turbulent forces that have propelled them to this chilly place of solitude.

Cold water can be restorativ­e, invigorati­ng; it’s also used to describe a buzzkill, a downer. The wonder of Assayas’ fifth feature is that it embodies both these contradict­ory impulses.

Drawn from the director’s personal memories of post-1968 excitement and disillusio­nment, the drama moves from surging emotional highs to melancholy lows, but it also pulses with a vibrant, moody energy that a 24-year delay from American screens has done nothing to diminish. (Long held up by music-rights clearance issues that have since been dealt with, the movie is opening in a 4K restoratio­n courtesy of Janus Films.)

When “Cold Water” emerged on the festival scene, it announced Assayas as one of a handful of directors, including Arnaud Desplechin, Claire Denis and André Techiné, who were bringing a terrific post-New Wave vitality to ’90s French cinema. In the years since, Assayas has become a critical and art-house favorite, as well as perhaps the most protean and cosmopolit­an of working French filmmakers. His restlessly intelligen­t, genre-defying movies, “Carlos,” “Personal Shopper” and “Irma Vep” not least among them, cross boundaries of language, culture and narrative expectatio­n with enviable ease.

That sense of freedom largely eludes the disaffecte­d, self-destructiv­e high schoolers in “Cold Water,” Gilles (Cyprien Fouquet) and Christine (Virginie Ledoyen), though they are constantly on the move. We first see them together at a record store, where Gilles recklessly shoplifts some LPs. He gets away, but Christine is arrested and turned over to her father (Jackie Berroyer), whom she loathes. Without uttering a word in her direction, he packs her off to a mental institutio­n called Beausoleil. It won’t be her first visit.

Gilles’ home life is a mild improvemen­t, though his recent academic woes — to say nothing of his love of thievery, vandalism and dynamite — have caused no end of friction. Shortly before their latest quarrel, his father (László Szabó), an art lover, marvels at a reproducti­on of a Caravaggio: “Few images of suffering move me more than this.” The generation­al disconnect is twofold: It isn’t just that these two barely speak the same cultural language but also that the father seems entirely blind to Gilles’ own suffering.

What strikes you by the end of “Cold Water” is just how fast it moves, how swiftly our time spent with these characters simply slips away. As in any Assayas picture, nothing about the story feels calculated or determinis­tic, or even especially story-like. But it has a momentum that feels all but inexorable, as though picking up its characters midstream and flinging them toward a wrenchingl­y uncertain future.

That sense of movement finds a visual echo in the handheld kineticism of the camerawork, an instantly recognizab­le Assayas signature that feels excitingly raw and unvarnishe­d in this early incarnatio­n. The cinematogr­apher, Denis Lenoir, sends the camera racing to keep up with Gilles and Christine, sometimes spying on them through partially obscured windows, sometimes framing them and their actions in disorienti­ng closeups. Clarity is elusive; the most potent moments of emotional exchange seem caught on the fly.

The jagged grace of Assayas’ direction achieves a blissed-out apotheosis in the film’s most celebrated sequence, in which Gilles and Christine (who has escaped Beausoleil) find each other at a party at an abandoned house in the countrysid­e. Incidental­ly, the reasons it took “Cold Water” so long to reach American theaters can all be found here, on a rich, fulsome ’70s soundtrack that flows from Janis Joplin’s “Bobby McGee” and Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out” to Bob Dylan’s “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door,” every lusciously drawn-out tune giving us something new to get lost in.

There’s a beautiful moment, a moment of heartstopp­ing bliss, in which a few teenagers pass around a hashpipe, sending wisps of blue smoke skyward as Dylan croons his immortal chorus. In a movie that hasn’t aged a day, it’s a reminder that few filmmakers inhabit the present tense as powerfully as Assayas or make the ephemeral feel so exhilarati­ng.

 ?? Janus Films ?? VIRGINIE LEDOYEN as Christine in “Cold Water,” a 1994 drama that is only now being released in U.S. theaters because of music rights.
Janus Films VIRGINIE LEDOYEN as Christine in “Cold Water,” a 1994 drama that is only now being released in U.S. theaters because of music rights.

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