Mia Hansen-Løve’s Company of Women

  • 📰 VanityFair
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 46 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 22%
  • Publisher: 55%

대한민국 뉴스 뉴스

대한민국 최근 뉴스,대한민국 헤드 라인

Mia Hansen-Løve has directed some of the finest female performances of the past decade. According to her stars—Isabelle Huppert, Léa Seydoux, Vicky Krieps, and Mia Wasikowska—it’s because she does things differently.

Or take one of Krieps’s best scenes, in a moment as simple as toothbrushing, vaguely sketched out on the page before coming alive during filming. She’s giggling to herself; the water running under the tap spurts a little, as it often does in old houses with rusty plumbing, and she bursts out laughing. You see her spirit here, a charm Hansen-Løve’s camera catches and never lets go of. Roth watches on from the bed, a bit befuddled.

Roth, however, was uncomfortable with the scene, particularly its intimacy. Hansen-Løve uses this as an example of how the tension between her and Roth’s perspectives ultimately enriched the film’s thorny exploration of gender dynamics within a marriage of artists. “It was as if the unconsciousness of the film was revealed through his attitude and his relationship to the film—and in the end, it made sense,” she says.

Léa Seydoux, perhaps concurrently, has come to prefer female directors. “With men, it’s more like you are more of an object of desire, and when a woman films you, it’s more like an alter ego,” thealum tells me. In the case of Hansen-Løve, this proved literal by working off the director’s memories of caring for her dying father: “When you play someone’s life, you can’t lie.”plunges into the personal. Seydoux calls the experience “almost like a diary.

 

귀하의 의견에 감사드립니다. 귀하의 의견은 검토 후 게시됩니다.
이 소식을 빠르게 읽을 수 있도록 요약했습니다. 뉴스에 관심이 있으시면 여기에서 전문을 읽으실 수 있습니다. 더 많은 것을 읽으십시오:

 /  🏆 391. in KR

대한민국 최근 뉴스, 대한민국 헤드 라인