I have seen some other films from director Eric Baudelaire, including the one that feels strongly connected to this one, but I cannot say I have formed any solid opinion of him yet. That's mainly down to my own ability to receive and digest what he's putting out. Baudelaire tackles some very weighty subject matter, and he does so in a way that doesn't spoon-feed viewers. That's admirable, in many ways, but it can leave anyone at a loss if they haven't done enough "homework".
The Ugly One is actually a more accessible film, and Baudelaire somehow manages to fill it with intelligence, emotional intelligence, and a playfulness that doesn't ever unsettle or undermine the very serious themes being addressed.
Making use of narration by Masao Adachi, who also helped to work on the screenplay with Baudelaire and one of his stars, Rabih Mroué, what we see here is an examination of the relationship between Michel (Mroué) and Lili (Juliette Navis) as they try to help one another, try to reckon with their own pasts that are perhaps not as totally left in the past as they could be, and explore their ties to areas that have been troubled by war and turbulent political changes.
While I cannot say what is complete fiction here and what is part of some meta-narrative, that is no bad thing. The film forces viewers to consider how we are all changed by every major event in our lives, sometimes in ways that make it impossible to get back to the person you once were. While most viewers won’t have experienced whatever these main characters have experienced (I hope), it’s easy to recognise the absorption of numerous traumas and see how a build up of scar tissue over scar tissue can help someone develop a tough shell that is as stifling as it is protective.
Mroué and Navis are both superb, as is the delivery of the narration by Adachi, and all three central performers feel as if they are occasionally baring parts of their souls in order to help make this so impactful and unforgettable.
While there were times when I was worried that this would leave me too far behind as conversations made use of details and context that I wasn’t fully aware of, I never became disengaged. It might seem dry, and more like an exercise than a narrative feature in the first act, but I was dragged in, and held firmly, by the strong emotional strands running throughout.
8/10
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