Clouds of Sils Maria | Little White Lies

Clouds of Sils Maria

14 May 2015 / Released: 15 May 2015

Woman with dark hair wearing glasses and a black hoodie, looking pensive and gazing out a window.
Woman with dark hair wearing glasses and a black hoodie, looking pensive and gazing out a window.
4

Anticipation.

Binoche and Assayas re-team for the first time since 2008’s Summer Hours.

4

Enjoyment.

The César-scooping Kristen Stewart is the real top-trump here.

3

In Retrospect.

It’s an impassioned work whose rough edges are sometimes too noticeable.

Kris­ten Stew­art achieves the impres­sive feat of out­shin­ing Juli­ette Binoche in this rich dra­ma from Olivi­er Assayas.

I’m tired of act­ing on wires in front of a green screen,” carps star actress Maria Enders (Juli­ette Binoche) in Clouds of Sils Maria, a com­plaint that con­nects the pro­tag­o­nist to her obvi­ous pre­de­ces­sor in direc­tor Olivi­er Assayas’ oeu­vre: Mag­gie Che­ung in 1996’s Irma Vep. The sim­i­lar­i­ties between these two films are instruc­tive. Like Che­ung, Binoche is play­ing a ver­sion of her­self”, and both films’ plots piv­ot on the pro­duc­tion of a poten­tial­ly prob­lem­at­ic remake, a mod­erni­sa­tion of a clas­sic silent film in the for­mer, and the mount­ing of an acclaimed stage play in the latter.

Assayas’ screen­play here is a wind­ing, ser­pen­tine cre­ation. Not for noth­ing is the play-with­in-the-film called Mal­o­ja Snake. As the film opens, Maria, who made her name in the orig­i­nal stage pro­duc­tion of Mal­o­ja Snake is mourn­ing the death of its author while field­ing a request to star in a new ver­sion where she plays a dif­fer­ent char­ac­ter – the mousy mid­dle-aged busi­ness­woman seduced by the sly young sex­pot she’d essayed in her sal­ad days. The psy­cho­log­i­cal­ly fraught propo­si­tion of switch­ing roles is tweaked even fur­ther for Maria by the (non-sex­u­al) inten­si­ty of her rela­tion­ship with her twen­tysome­thing assis­tant, Val (Kris­ten Stew­art), whom she has come rely on to an alarm­ing degree.

Stew­art won the César award for Best Sup­port­ing Actress for Clouds of Sils Maria, and while it’s tempt­ing to sug­gest that she deserved the prize just for being able to keep up with Binoche in their long back-and-forth dia­logue scenes, the fact is that the Amer­i­can ingénue actu­al­ly cre­ates the rich­er char­ac­ter­i­sa­tion. As Val’s unqual­i­fied admi­ra­tion for her boss gives way to frus­tra­tion at how eas­i­ly Maria dis­miss­es her ideas about life and art – like in a tip­sy throw-down about a cheesy super­hero movie fea­tur­ing Hol­ly­wood It Girl Jo Ann Ellis (Chloë Grace Moretz), Maria’s prospec­tive star in the new Mal­o­ja Snake – Stew­art shows a tetchy edge a mil­lion miles removed from Twilight.

She also takes the soft­balls the script lobs her about the per­ni­cious­ness of con­tem­po­rary celebri­ty cul­ture and knocks them out of the park. When Val protests to Maria that Jo Ann is a wor­thy actress beyond her TMZ-bait­ing after­work antics, it’s cathar­tic in a way that res­onates beyond the world of the film. It also sug­gests that Assayas is dou­bling down on the blurred lines between per­form­ers and their roles. Yet not all of the director’s games­man­ship works so well. Moretz is too ano­dyne in a skimpi­ly writ­ten part, and the scenes in which Assayas tries to actu­al­ly visu­alise the state-of-the-art Hol­ly­wood cin­e­ma that Maria is fret­ting about are phoney in a way that exceeds their satir­i­cal function.

There is per­haps some­thing a lit­tle pre­fab about Clouds of Sils Maria, which not only leans heav­i­ly on high­brow works like The Bit­ter Tears of Petra Von Kant and Autumn Sonata, but seems to active­ly yearn for a return to the glo­ry days of the stony cham­ber dra­ma. Irma Vep’s apoc­a­lyp­tic diag­no­sis of con­tem­po­rary French cin­e­ma cli­maxed with an embrace of new forms; it was gid­dy and fear­ful at the same time. Clouds of Sils Maria, mean­while, is clever and con­trolled – almost to a fault.

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