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MT 5 April 2015

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XII maltatoday, Sunday, 5 april 2015 This Week IN CINEMAS TODAY Embassy Cinemas Valletta Tel. 21 227436, 21 245818 Fast and Furious 7 (12) 10:15, 13:25, 15:50, 18:25, 21:15 Run all Night (15) 13:45, 16:15, 18:45, 21:15 Kingsman: The Secret Service (12) 10:10, 20:50 SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of The Water (U) 10:00, 12:10, 14:20, 16:30, 18:40 Chappie (15) 16:00, 18:30, 21:00 Cinderella (U) 10:15, 13:30, 16:00, 18:30, 21:00 Home (U) 10:30, 13:45, 16:15 (3D), 18:45, 20:55 Eden Cinemas St Julian's Tel. 23 710400 Chappie 14:00, 16:25, 18:50, 21:15, 23:45 Run All Night (15) 14:00, 16:25, 18:45, 21:10, 23:35 Cinderella (U) 14:00, 16:25, 18:50, 21:15, 23:40 Suite Francaise (15) 14:05, 16:20, 18:35, 20:55, 23:20 Il-Klikka The Film (15) 14:10, 16:30, 18:50, 21:10, 23:30 Kingsman: The Secret Service (12) 14:25, 18:05, 20:45, 23:25 Focus (15) 14:05, 16:20, 18:45, 21:05, 23:25 The Boy Next Door (15) 14:10, 16:15, 18:35, 20:50, 23:00 The Spongebob Movie: Sponge Out of The Water 3D (U) 14:15, 16:30, 18:45, 20:55, 23:05 Rise and Fall of the City of Ma- hogany (PG) 20:15 Home (U) 14:10, 16:15, 18:30, 20:45, 22:55 The Face of an Angel (15) 14:15, 16:30, 18:45, 20:50, 23:00 Fast and Furious 7 (12) 14:30, 16:00, 18:00, 20:00, 21:00, 23:00, 23:50 Empire Cinemas Bugibba Tel. 21 581787, 21 581909 Home 3D (U) 10:15, 12:30, 14:35, 16:40, 18:45, 20:50 Cinderella (U) 11:00, 13:35, 16:00, 18:25, 20:50 The Spongebob Movie: Sponge Out of Water (U) 10:30 (3D), 12:30 (3D), 14:30, 16:30, 18:35, 20:45 (3D) Fast and Furious 7 (12) 10:10, 12:55, 15:40, 18:25, 21:15 Run All Night (15) 10:55, 13:30, 15:55, 18:20, 20:50 The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (PG) 10:45, 13:25, 16:00, 18:30, 21:05 Suite Francais (15) 11:05, 13:35, 15:55, 18:15, 20:45 The genesis and subsequent exhumation of Irene Némirovsky's incomplete manuscript for Suite Francaise is just as fascinating as the story it tells, and cer- tainly competes in the drama and intrigue stakes with this film adaptation – a tasteful but some- what f laccid affair from relative newcomer Saul Dibb. Planned as a larger cycle of novels depicting the Nazi occupa- tion of France, the composition of Suite Francaise was cut short when Némirovsky – a Ukranian Jew – was arrested by the Nazis in 1942 and sent to Auschwitz, where she died at the age of 39. However, Némirovsky's daughter Denise finally discovered the notebook containing the novel in the late 90s, which she published in France in 2004, and it went on to become an international bestseller. Though we do get a glimpse of Némirovsky's own situation in a character that could easily be a stand-in for her (here played by Al- exandra Maria Lara), one wonders whether a film entirely dedicated to Némirovsky's direct experience as a writer between the wars would have made for more compelling viewing. For while her fiction still bears very close resemblance to real-life experience, the thread of romantic melodrama serves to dis- tract from what could have been a more cutting, memorable story. France, 1940. In the first days of occupation, beautiful Lucile Angel- lier is trapped in a stif led existence with her controlling mother-in-law as they both await news of her husband: a prisoner of war. We are taken to the small pro- vincial of Bussy in 1940, which is disturbed by a sudden but initially, relatively peaceful occupation by German militia. The disruption instead occurs at communal level, with certain soldiers taking pleasure in tortur- ing the 'little lives' of the peasants that are forced to take them in – such as Benoit (Sam Riley) and Madeleine Labarie (Ruth Wil- son), while our protagonist Lucile (Michelle Williams) undergoes a subtler intrusion: that of a handsome and cultured Lieuten- ant Bruno von Falk (Matthias Schoenaerts), for whom she begins to develop feelings despite the fact that her husband is away fighting her compatriots, and much to the chagrin of her stern mother-in-law, Madame Angellier (Kristin Scott Thomas). A composer before he was drafted into the war, Bruno's gentle spirit appears to contradict the actions of both his superiors and military colleagues. But their will-they/won't-they dynamic draws suspicion in this tight-knit community – both from the peasants Madame Angellier perceives as 'beneath' them, as well as the collaborationist bourgeois elite, personified by Viscount de Montmort (Lambert Wilson) and his wife (Harriet Walter). Though Dibb directs only one segment from Némirovsky's tome of a book for obvious reasons, the melodramatic story still leaves room for plenty of complexities that are never fully exploited. The 'odd couple' story hinges on an essential ambiguity that is only played for its Romeo and Juliet dy- namic and little else. At same time, the film still manages to be over- stuffed: with secondary characters bloating the narrative f low and running time, often unnecessarily. The parallel experience of both the bourgeois and rural families is well presented, but one of each would have been enough. Williams and Schoenaerts both hold their own, though the latter manages to affect pained restraint more that his co-star, who comes across as listless rather than genuinely wistful for most of the time. As happens all too often, Scott-Thomas is trotted out to play the take-no-prisoners authority figure, and in this case she's not allowed to skim any deeper than the Dowager Countess stereotype embodied by Maggie Smith in Downton Abbey. With its emotional beats in the right place and a story that's hard to resist either way, rounded off by kind of sumptious production de- sign that gets bums on seats, Suite Francaise – a BBC Films co-pro- duction – never ventures too far beyond its comfort zone. Which is a shame, because in the place of a generic costume drama, we could have had a complex treatment of the psychological dynamics of war. By Teodor Reljic All is fair in love and war ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PRESIDENTIAL SUITE ★ ★ ★ ★ HONEYMOON SUITE ★ ★ ★ SWEET ENOUGH ★ ★ SICKLY SWEET ★ DIABETIC SUITE FRANÇAISE (15) ★ ★ FILM www.gourmettoday.recipes Star-crossed: Michelle Williams and Matthias Schoenaerts

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