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Drama

The Artist and the Model

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In occupied France in summer 1943, a world-weary famous sculptor finds the desire to work again with the arrival of a beautiful young Spanish refugee.

Release Date : 2012-09-28

Language :French

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Fernando Trueba PCTVE

Production Country : Spain

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Jean Rochefort

Character Name : Marc Cros

Original Name : Jean Rochefort

Gender : Male

Aida Folch

Character Name : Mercè

Original Name : Aida Folch

Gender : Female

Claudia Cardinale

Character Name : Léa

Original Name : Claudia Cardinale

Gender : Female

Götz Otto

Character Name : Werner

Original Name : Götz Otto

Gender : Male

Chus Lampreave

Character Name : María

Original Name : Chus Lampreave

Gender : Female

Christian Sinniger

Character Name : Emile

Original Name : Christian Sinniger

Gender : Male

Martin Gamet

Character Name : Pierre

Original Name : Martin Gamet

Gender : Male

Mateo Deluz

Character Name : Henri

Original Name : Mateo Deluz

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-08-10

Jean Rochefort and Aida Foch present quite an unique sort of love story here as he ("Cros") invites her ("Mercè") to sit for him as a muse for his sculpture. They met because his wife "Léa" (Claudia Cardinale) encountered the girl fleeing from the Nazis in the occupied part of France. She is aspiring to make it back home to Spain, bit is weak and penniless. As she poses for the elderly man, they enquire much of each other and begin to develop a bond that is entirely complementary to his marriage, but provides him with a long lost, invigorated, inspiration to create something beautiful from his block of marble. It's a slow burn, this, but somehow it manages to create a perfect framework for an evaluation of age, certainly, but also of beauty too. A beauty that is reflected on a more viscera level by the fact that Foch is naked for a great part of the film - even when not posing; but also of the beauty of the art and the craft of working the stone - something that the lighting team must take considerable credit for illustrating in an almost halo-like fashion. The dialogue is sparing but lively when it's there, and Cardinale delivers very well as the foil to the increasingly intense friendship between the two ostensibly polar opposites. The denouement wasn't quite what I was expecting, but it worked fittingly as this attractively photographed story of affection came to a close that offered a form of redemption for all.