Private Fears in Public Places (2006)
Director: Alain Resnais
Movie review
From Time Out Chicago
With Private Fears, the French New Wave’s poet of loss and disconnection looks inward. Resnais’s theatrically stylized new movie is set in a snow globe Paris—almost literally. Exteriors, when glimpsed, are blatantly artificial, and most scenes end with a fade to falling snow. Adapted from a play by Alan Ayckbourn, the plot involves six major characters, each of whom suffers from a form of unrequited passion. They pine for one another and are pined for in turn, but they never end up with a person who loves them back.Real-estate broker Thierry (Dussollier) is smitten with coworker Sabine (Azéma), who’s ostensibly devout and therefore uninterested. Sabine moonlights as a caregiver for the surly, unseen father of Lionel (Arditi), a bartender who admires Sabine and who regularly waits on Dan (Wilson), an alcoholic reconsidering his engagement to Nicole (Morante). Dan’s date with Gaelle (Carré), Theirry’s preposterously young sister, provides the movie with its happiest interlude, but the hermetic scenario won’t stand for it: Opportunities for love are limited, Resnais suggests, and if you miss them, you’re out of luck.
Author: Ben Kenigsberg
Time Out Chicago Issue 119: June 7–13, 2007
Cast & crew
Director: Alain Resnais
Producer: Bruno Pesery
Cast: Sabine Azéma, André Dussollier, Lambert Wilson, Isabelle Carré, Pierre Arditi, Nicole Laura Morante, Claude Rich full cast
Genre(s): Drama
Duration: 126 mins
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