Los Angeles Times

Mournful biopic on call girl/writer

- — Kevin Crust

Sadness envelops the French Canadian biopic “Nelly.” Born in Quebec as Isabelle Fortier, Nelly Arcan worked as a high-class call girl before bursting onto the French-language literary scene with the semi-autobiogra­phical novel “Putain” under her nom de plume in 2001. She wrote three more novels before taking her life at 36 in 2009.

Writer-director Anne Émond’s collage of Arcan’s life captures her beauty, glamour and a sense of her talent. But just as those things were not enough to sustain the woman, they’re not enough to sustain a movie. The dreamlike narrative flows with endless melodrama that rarely modulates from the blue zone, and despite a few electric moments, the film feels oddly flat.

Mylène Mackay portrays Arcan with subdued vulnerabil­ity, brandishin­g her dissatisfa­ction with life as a literary shield in an endless pursuit of the attention she craved since she was a little girl.

However, no amount of drugs and alcohol, fancy hotels, luxurious gowns, bestsellin­g books or plastic surgery could fill the emptiness she felt inside.

Arcan wrote prolifical­ly about beauty and female identity in essays and articles as well as her books, and Émond uses those words extensivel­y in the film.

But what may have been profound and poetic on the page feels redundant and banal on screen. It’s a sad tale that never manifests much more than that singular emotion. “Nelly.” In French and English with English subtitles. Not rated. Playing: Laemmle Royal, West L.A.; Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena

 ?? Cinema Libre Studio ?? MYLÈNE MACKAY portrays Nelly Arcan in a flat film stuffed with seemingly endless melodrama.
Cinema Libre Studio MYLÈNE MACKAY portrays Nelly Arcan in a flat film stuffed with seemingly endless melodrama.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States