Periodically there’s a film that resonates long after viewing; marinating in one’s memory for days, oftentimes forever.
Iranian writer/director Asghar Farhadi’s (“A Separation”) “The Past” is such a movie; simplicity balloons to complex; ambiguities, seemingly clarified, become murky; empathy, fickly flows from one character to another as “the past’ is sporadically revealed.
Bernice Bejo as “Marie” is astounding as a woman incapable of controlling, solely reacting, to a situation; a mother of two and as many failed marriages, embarking on another romantic commitment with “Samir” (Tahar Rahim) a man whose wife is in a coma and young son “Fouad” (poignantly profound performance by Elyes Aguis) are in constant conflict between the past, present and a vague, misty future.
We meet Marie, and her soon to be ex-husband, Iranian “Ahmad” (sensitive depiction by Ali Mosaffa) at a Paris airport; Marie is bruised, bemused, ambivalent in her reaction to Ahmad; he has been gone for four years; above the fray, a controlling moral barometer; attached to her two children by a previous marriage; “Lucie” (stunning, painful, morose portrait by Pauline Burlet) the eldest daughter ripped asunder, by Maria’s affair with the married Samir; a brooding teenager dishing huge portions of angst on her mother and Samir.
Marie’s home and its disarray is a metaphor for life and its diverse choices; spilled paint, referencing ill-advised decisions; peeling walls, unmade beds signaling the loss of dignity, concern, control over one’s inner refinement; stumbling, unwashed bodies, craving, purification of the spirit; salvation from known turpitude. These average, unforgettable people cling to one’s psyche; masterful, intimate camera work magnetically suck the viewer into this disparate, strange, yet familiar milieu.
FOUR STARS!!!!
Peneflix
Your review of THE PAST is superb, Peneflix! Excellent film, well written and acted , and, a portrayal of another side of Paris not often seen in films.
Love it when we agree. Thank you. P.