By Lindsey Bahr, Film Writer
VENICE, Italy (AP) --Catherine Deneuve plays an icon of French cinema in "The Truth." She even chose her own middle name, Fabienne, for her character who says things like, "I'd rather have been a bad friend and a bad mother and a great actress."
But don't go looking for some essential truths, or gossip, about Deneuve in lines like that, or in Fabienne's eyeroll at the mention of Brigitte Bardot. The 76-year-old insists that similarities end with the name.
"To me she's a stranger," Deneuve said, cigarette in hand, after "The Truth's" debut at the Venice Film Festival. "It's really so far away from me."
She has a great relationship with her children and her co-stars and can't think of any friendly rivalry with peers from her past. But it doesn't make "The Truth," which became available on demand Friday (7/3), any less of a fun send-up of an imperious, larger-than-life star who might not remember things the same way her grown daughter Lumir does.
The tragicomic portrait of a star in her final act who is juggling a film, the release of her memoirs and a visit from her daughter, played by Juliette Binoche, comes by way of "Shoplifters" director Hirokazu Kore-eda in his first film outside of his native Japan.
It was a truly international affair, with a script primarily in French and English, a director who spoke neither and actors who didn't speak Japanese. Ethan Hawke, who plays Lumir's actor husband, didn't speak French either. Suffice it to say, the Paris shoot was little daunting for everyone considering the film is a dialogue-heavy character study about the nature of truth and memory and a delicate mother-daughter relationship with moments of comedy and drama.
But Hawke found a way to comfort his director.
"He said, 'To make a good movie it's not important to share the same language. It's important to share the same vision,'" Kore-eda said through a translator. "I think that's exactly the case."
And all the actors adjusted in their own way. Deneuve said after she'd finish a take, she would look at her director before anything else.
"It's important. You see little signs," she said. "After that we talk. But I always try to read something on his face first."
Deneuve relished the role and getting the chance to work with Binoche. Somehow the two had never been in a film together.
"It was really fun to play because it was so exaggerated," she said. "It reminded me of the actresses from the 50s or 60s in America because you have all these people around. You know, I don't have a press agent, I don't have a stylist, I don't have a manager."
Kore-eda counted himself as a fan of Deneuve's and peppered her with questions about her films with French New Wave legends like François Truffaut and Jacques Demy.
"Having my film in her filmography — which is as prestigious as the history of French cinema itself — is for me a source of both pride and anxiety," he said.
On set, he found her to be a free spirit with little vanity but always a cigarette around.
"She's like a person that is also like a child but extremely charming," he said. "She's not one who learns all her lines beforehand. She gets the gist. She gets on set and she adjusts acting together with the other actors who are moving around. I thought that for this movie that would fit the situation."
This is not to imply that she doesn't take her work seriously. She does. In fact, partway through the movie she came to him and asked if she could see anything edited, especially scenes that she wasn't in herself. Deneuve wanted to grasp, "the whole of the movie."
"I gave her a DVD with about 1/3 of the movie on it and she was really happy about it," Kore-eda said. "She said, 'Thanks to this, I got to understand your humor, your rhythm.'"
Deneuve loves to work and despite her revered status will often take a chance on an unknown if the script is compelling. She'd even consider American television, but she doesn't get many offers from across the Atlantic. The few that do come her way, she said, are "not very interesting." Retirement is not something she thinks of. The cinema still excites her too much.
"I suppose the cinema will retire me before I retire," she said. "You retire on films when you don't have any parts to be offered."
Kore-eda did have a little amendment to Deneuve's claim that Fabienne isn't like her at all, however. Before filming, he asked his star if there was any young actress in France who had "received her DNA."
"She said, 'No, there is no one,'" he said.
Kore-eda was so impressed by her answer and her conviction, he decided Fabienne had to say the same thing. The truth, sometimes, is relative.
Review: Writer-Director Coralie Fargeat’s “The Substance”
In its first two hours, "The Substance" is a well-made, entertaining movie. Writer-director Coralie Fargeat treats audiences to a heavy dose of biting social commentary on ageism and sexism in Hollywood, with a spoonful of sugar- and sparkle-doused body horror.
But the film's deliciously unhinged, blood-soaked and inevitably polarizing third act is what makes it unforgettable.
What begins as a dread-inducing but still relatively palatable sci-fi flick spirals deeper into absurdism and violence, eventually erupting — quite literally — into a full-blown monster movie. Let the viewer decide who the monster is.
Fargeat — who won best screenplay at this year's Cannes Film Festival — has been vocal about her reverence for "The Fly" director David Cronenberg, and fans of the godfather of body horror will see his unmistakable influence. But "The Substance" is also wholly unique and benefits from Fargeat's perspective, which, according to the French filmmaker, has involved extensive grappling with her own relationship to her body and society's scrutiny.
"The Substance" tells the story of Elisabeth Sparkle, a famed aerobics instructor with a televised show, played by a powerfully vulnerable Demi Moore. Sparkle is fired on her 50th birthday by a ruthless executive — a perfectly cast Dennis Quaid, who nails sleazy and gross.
Feeling rejected by a town that once loved her and despairing over her bygone star power, Sparkle learns from a handsome young nurse about a black-market drug that promises to create a "younger, more beautiful, more perfect" version of its user. Though she initially tosses the phone number in the trash, she soon fishes it out in a desperate panic and places an order.
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