海角大神

'Clouds of Sils Maria': Acting out a diva's rite of passage

Juliette Binoche stars in the latest actor's tale.

|
Courtesy of Carole Bethuel/CG Cinema
Maria Enders (Juliette Binoche) rambles the Swiss high country as she contemplates a return to the stage in 鈥楥louds of Sils Maria.鈥

In writer-director Olivier Assayas鈥檚 鈥淐louds of Sils Maria,鈥 Juliette Binoche is playing an actress. In a sense, we are watching a performance about a performance. I would not make the mistake, however, as some critics have, of assuming Binoche is essentially playing herself. (A quick survey of her eclectic career dispels that notion.) But it鈥檚 also true that most actors have an irresistible urge to dramatize their innate theatricality 鈥 the best recent example is Al Pacino in the unjustly neglected 鈥淭he Humbling鈥 鈥 and Binoche here certainly fills that bill.

She plays Maria Enders, an international star who broke through as an 18-year-old ing茅nue in an Ingmar Bergmanesque production written by a celebrated playwright, Wilhelm Melchior. Years later, as Assayas鈥檚 film opens, Melchior is about to receive a tribute in Zurich, Switzerland, at which Maria is scheduled to speak. His sudden death converts the tribute into a memorial.

Accompanying Maria is her American personal assistant Val (Kristen Stewart), who is hyperattuned to her boss鈥檚 every mood 鈥 and there are plenty of them on display. Maria鈥檚 main conflict is whether she should accept the role of the older woman in a London staging of the same drama that kicked off her career. For reasons more neurotic than practical, she wavers until the fawning hotshot director (Lars Eidinger) finally wears her down. Maria鈥檚 reluctance is bound up with her fears of aging, but she also knows a good role when she sees it. (She demeans her occasional Hollywood work-for-hire by complaining, 鈥淚鈥檓 sick of hanging from wires in front of green screens.鈥) Without her full awareness, her doing the play represents her rite of passage as a mature actress.

The part of the 18-year-old is to be played by Jo-Ann Ellis (Chlo毛 Grace Moretz), reputedly highly talented despite her Lindsay Lohan-like off-camera shenanigans. Although she seems almost preternaturally poised upon meeting Maria for the first time, her extracurricular scandalousness remains intact. (She is carrying on a not terribly discreet affair with an older, married British boyfriend.) The shock here, and it really shouldn鈥檛 be a shock, is that Jo-Ann is much more assured, as both person and actress, than Maria. Jo-Ann is too young and headstrong to have doubts; Maria is too far along for such certitude.

Assayas knows how to create an embracing sense of intimacy among his players, and this shows itself to best advantage in the many scenes between Maria and Val. This is one of the few films that captures the complex intensity of the diva/personal assistant dynamic. Stewart, who was also very fine as Julianne Moore鈥檚 daughter in 鈥淪till Alice,鈥 seems at her best playing one-on-one opposite strong older actresses. Binoche鈥檚 performance, which is much more high-styled than Stewart鈥檚, doesn鈥檛 always ring true, but that may be because she is playing a character who can鈥檛 pass a mirror without peering into it. Self-consciousness is her armature.

The film鈥檚 title 鈥 which, come to think of it, is too self-conscious 鈥 derives from a meteorological phenomenon called the Maloja Snake, which is sometimes visible in the Engadine valley near the Alpine town of Sils Maria. Low-lying mists and fog move snakelike through the mountains 鈥 a sight to behold for sure, although its metaphorical relevance to the story is about as substantial as a fluffy cloud. Grade: B (Rated R for language, brief graphic nudity.)

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to 'Clouds of Sils Maria': Acting out a diva's rite of passage
Read this article in
/The-Culture/Movies/2015/0410/Clouds-of-Sils-Maria-Acting-out-a-diva-s-rite-of-passage
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe