Vernon Film Society

SUMMER HOURS

Director: Olivier Assayas
Cast: Juliette Binoche, Charles Berling, Jérémie Renier, Edith Scob
Run Time: 102 minutes
Country: France
Year: 2009
Language: French with English subtitles
Rating: PG (Drug use)

Screening at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival®, the masterful new film by Olivier Assayas (Clean) is not a radical departure from his previous work, but the differences are nonetheless striking. Summer Hours has a mature look and feel, made by an artist completely at ease with the medium. Without striving for effect, Assayas is happy to let the material speak for itself. And what a magnificent achievement it is. The film deals with ideas of tradition and family heritage, using a house and garden as a metaphor for cultural memory.

Hélène (Edith Scob) lives in a rambling mansion full of art: Corot landscapes, Redon panels, a variety of rare and valuable objects, and her own uncle’s paintings. On her seventy-fifth birthday, her three grown children arrive to celebrate the happy milestone. Frédéric (Charles Berling) is an economist. The younger son, Jérémie (Jérémie Renier, Le Silence de Lorna), has relocated to Shanghai with his family, where he manufactures running shoes. And finally, there is the dark and brooding Adrienne (Juliette Binoche, Blue, Paris), a successful designer who now lives in New York.

Assayas assembles this group and then delicately begins to explore them as individuals. Events force Hélène’s children to make a series of decisions that have everything to do with their shared sense of the past. What to do with all of these memories and objects that define them and in a sense create their identity? Can all this be discarded? What at first appears to be a simple decision they make together turns into something much thornier. As unexpected emotions surface among the siblings, they discover that they have changed and now aspire to different things. How these tensions are resolved is the subject of this intimate drama. Summer Hours is a work of great lyrical power, and Assayas shows an extraordinary control of place and character, bringing the two into beautiful harmony.

Incisively written, superbly acted by some of France’s finest performers and displaying a delicately understated approach to the subject matter, Assayas’s new film moves effortlessly through its narrative with all the grace of Renoir at the height of his powers.

“In spite of its modest scale, tactful manner and potentially dowdy subject matter, is packed nearly to bursting with rich meaning and deep implication.”
-  A.O. Scott, The New York Times

Reviews: www.metacritic.com/film/titles/summerhours

Official Site: www.ifcfilms.com/films/summer-hours

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