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MALTATODAY 16 June 2019

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8 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 16 JUNE 2019 FILM FILM WITH narratives of LGBTIQ relationships becoming more and more prevalent on the world media stage, the drive towards historical reconsid- eration of some of our cultural expectations on that front is both inevitable and welcome – at least in the best of all pos- sible worlds. Among the promising selec- tion forming part of this year's edition of the Valletta Film Festival (which kicked off on Thursday evening), Céline Sciamma's award-winning Portrait of a Lady on Fire takes this subtler and more ambi- tious route, deftly imagining the emotional byways a bud- ding gay couple would have to navigate in the 18th century – when even styling themselves as such would have been a feat beyond either language or thought. Such as it is, the narrative of Sciamma's two-hour slow- burner is simple. Even, on the face of it, threateningly thin. Marianne (Noémie Merlant), a young painter, is tasked with painting a wedding portrait for the equally young Héloïse (Adèle Haenel) by the girl's mother (Valeria Golino). Ar- riving by boat to their remote residence on an island just outside of Brittany, Marianne is instructed to keep mum about her assignment, with her mother presenting the painter to Héloïse as a walking-and- talking companion, someone to help her pass the time prior to her transition to married life. But while initially frosty, the relationship between the two young women slowly but sure- ly begins to morph into some- thing far deeper, and more intimate. Indirectly aided and abetted by the household maid Sophie (Luàna Bajrami) – whose own social trans- gressions the duo also help in occluding – Héloïse and Marianne become far more than just painter and painted, though the pecularity of Mari- anne's assignment adds a layer of wistful distance to the expe- rience. Eschewing any histrion- ics, empty virtue signaling or recourse to cliche, Sciam- ma – who also penned the screenplay – carefully and methodically sketches out the outlines of a relationship that should not be forced as it is to exist only within the interstic- es of a society that can neither recognise nor welcome such an arrangement. But the girls are hardly depicted as hopeless victims, consumed and blinded by love and lust made futile by the mores of their times. Tell- ing silences, fleeting glances and the deferral of passion through the mediums of paint- ing, literature and music – the use of Vivaldi's 'Summer' and the story of Orpheus and Eury- dice in Ovid's Metamorphoses pay off substantial subtextual dividends – proposes the idea that in less socially and sexual- ly egalitarian times, unconven- tional couplings still happened, just not in the way we would expect them to, perhaps. Winner of both the 'Queer Palm' and Best Screenplay award at this year's edition of the Cannes Film Festival, Céline Sciamma's film is a slow-burning but also lush and touching portrait of forbidden love ON FIRE LIT HIT GRIT SHIT ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The verdict A masterful feat of con- trolled storytelling, Céline Sciamma's deserving award- winner is an emotionally acute but entirely unsenti- mental portrait of barely- requited love, whose wist- ful atmosphere enfolds every beautifully photo- graphed frame. Perfectly cast and adroitly communicating a pithy but complex emo- tional landscape, Noémie Merlant and Adèle Haenel also succeed in leading the concept to full bloom, whose stifled passion is perversely delicious to watch. Portrait of a Lady on Fire will be screening at Pjazza Teatru Rjal on June 20 and Spazju Kreattiv at St James Cavalier on June 22 at 9pm. The film is part of the Vallet- ta Film Festival programme. Teodor Reljic ★ ★ ★ ★ P O RT R A I T O F A L A DY O N F I R E ( T B C ) Stifled passions Noémie Merlant and Adèle Haenel expertly navigate their way through a complex emotional landscape in Céline Sciamma's award-winning queer period drama

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