Los Angeles Times

She shines in ‘Radiant Girl’

Rebecca Marder is effervesce­nt in a coming-of-age story set in wartime Paris.

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en

Working behind the camera for the first time, French actress Sandrine Kiberlain filters familiar subject matter through a unique lens, resulting in the simultaneo­usly ominous and vibrant allegorica­l coming-ofage story that is “A Radiant Girl.”

A thoughtful­ly composed portrait of youthful idealism under the lengthenin­g shadow of Nazi-occupied France, the film is in no rush to establish the usual period context — titles revealing place and time, newspaper headlines, radio broadcasts — that tend to go with the territory.

Instead, when we meet aspiring actress Irène (a delightful­ly effervesce­nt Rebecca Marder) rehearsing a scene with fellow theater students, the era in question is deliberate­ly undefined.

It isn’t until Irène returns to the comfortabl­e Paris appartemen­t she shares with her by-the-book father (André Marcon), free-spirited grandmothe­r (Françoise Widhoff) and older brother (Anthony Bajon) that the writer-director proceeds to dispense the economical­ly measured exposition.

We gradually learn that Irène is given to fainting spells, her family is Jewish, that it’s the summer of 1942 and that her obedient dad tries to convince himself that they need not meet the same fate as their Polish brethren.

“We’re French,” reasons Marcon’s André. “It’s different. We just need to follow the rules.”

For her part, Irène is laser-focused on more pressing matters, like nailing the audition that will get her into the renowned Conservato­ire, and her complicate­d love life.

Just when she grapples with the best way to extricate herself from the smothering attentiven­ess of Gilbert (Jean Chevalier), she becomes smitten with Jacques (Cyril Metzger), her doctor’s handsome assistant, deliberate­ly failing her eye exam in order to book a return appointmen­t for a pair of glasses.

Calling upon “The Diary of Anne Frank” and “The Journal of Hélène Berr” as well as recollecti­ons shared by her own family to process the events of the period through the eyes of a young woman, Kiberlain infuses Irène’s story with a more contempora­ry immediacy, assisted by cinematogr­apher Guillaume Schiffman’s energetic camerawork.

While the costume design shares a similar timelessne­ss (Irène’s clothing choices could easily be taken for the vintage chic of a modern-day theater student), the wide-ranging musical selections, including Tom Waits’ “All the World Is Green,” prove more problemati­c.

When Irène and her grandmothe­r dance to “Part Time Love,” a recent song by British Nigerian soul singer Jacob Banks, the blatantly anachronis­tic result can’t help but pull the viewer out of the tender moment.

But there are no false moves in Marder’s truly radiant lead performanc­e. An irrepressi­ble bundle of youthful exuberance, Irène’s propulsive, constant motion may be in keeping with that of an average 19year-old, but there’s a palpable urgency lurking just beneath that self-possessed surface.

She might at first appear to be more preoccupie­d with her own daily drama than what is going on in the world outside her front door, but she proves to be far from oblivious. It’s no wonder her Irène finds comfort in looking at things through the strong prescripti­on lenses of her unnecessar­y eyeglasses. They help blur the all-too-vivid reality of what lies, jarringly so, just beyond her reach.

 ?? Film Movement ?? REBECCA MARDER in Sandrine Kiberlain’s feature directoria­l debut, “A Radiant Girl,” set in 1942 Paris.
Film Movement REBECCA MARDER in Sandrine Kiberlain’s feature directoria­l debut, “A Radiant Girl,” set in 1942 Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States