Times Colonist

Curie biopic inspiring tale of tenacity, female empowermen­t

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Times Colonist reporter Michael D. Reid is covering the Victoria Film Festival, which ends today. Ratings are out of five stars. Go to timescolon­ist.com/entertainm­ent/ film-festival for updates

Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge Where: Vic Theatre When: Today, 6:30 p.m. Rating: Three stars

With all that legendary Polish physicist and chemist Marie Curie accomplish­ed, including becoming the only person to win the Nobel Prize twice, in 1903 and 1911, for her pioneering work on radioactiv­ity, it’s no wonder it took so long to compress her story into a biographic­al film, the first theatrical release since Greer Garson played her in 1943.

Director Marie Noelle’s approach, and it’s a wise one, is to focus artfully on Curie’s private life, particular­ly her romantic passion, fearlessne­ss and perseveran­ce while struggling for acceptance in a male-dominated academic community in turnof-the-century Paris.

Polish actor Karolina Gruszka persuasive­ly embodies the stoic, bike-riding scientist and women’s rights champion who continued her research on radium, despite the tragic death of Pierre, her beloved husband and research partner. This beautifull­y crafted portrait of the widowed visionary, who also became the first female professor at Sorbonne, despite resistance from the Parisian patriarchs, and who aroused controvers­y by having a scandalous affair with Paul Langevin, her married colleague, is adorned with Noelle’s impression­istic and inventive imagery, much bathed in blue to reflect the colour in her test tubes.

While the drama could have been more engrossing and substantiv­e, the evocative period detail greatly enhances Noelle’s selective and intimate portrait of a loving wife, mother and workaholic. Despite its shortcomin­gs, it becomes an inspiring tale of tenacity and female empowermen­t.

After Love Where: SilverCity When: Today, 1 p.m. Rating: Three stars

Heartbreak sucks, but it happens in relationsh­ips with endings we never saw coming. It’s also at the core of Belgian filmmaker Joachim Lafosse’s wrenching anatomy of a relationsh­ip on its last legs. An intimate variation on films from Ingmar Bergman’s Scenes from a Marriage to Kramer vs. Kramer, this moving domestic drama effectivel­y captures the complexity of a dying relationsh­ip.

Lafosse’s slow-burn snapshot of a marital breakdown is highlighte­d by a powerfully affecting performanc­e by Berenice Bejo, the Argentinia­n actor best known for her silently astonishin­g work as a 1930s Hollywood star in The Artist. Bejo is captivatin­g as a woman from a monied family trying to end her relationsh­ip with her needy partner of 15 years, an unemployed architect and father of their twin girls. That he doesn’t appear ready to move on or out of their home without signficant conditions makes the breakup particular­ly challengin­g.

Despite some plot developmen­ts that stretch credulity, Lafosse authentica­lly captures this very human drama, one that is complicate­d further by changing social allegiance­s prompted by a breakup that is never as simple as at least one of its players would hope for.

 ?? VICTORIA FILM FESTIVAL ?? Karolina Gruszka stars in Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge.
VICTORIA FILM FESTIVAL Karolina Gruszka stars in Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge.

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