6/10
Beautiful demons of youth bedevil filmmaker team
23 February 2007
Warning: Spoilers
We've all heard of a "ménage à trois." Pascal Arnold and Jean-Marc Barr's film One to Another/Chacun sa nuit presents a ménage à cinq, an ultra-photogenic one with four boys to one girl, all tanned, pretty, and hot to trot and in the summer in a beautiful southern part of France. At the center of the five is the insecure but magnetic lead singer of the clan's boy band, Pierre (Arthur Dupont) He's the bisexual brother of Lucie (Lizzie Brocheré), with whom he has a relationship just short of out-and-out incest. Nicolas (Guillaume Baché) is also bisexual, so he and Pierre have sex on the sly. Sébastien (Pierre Perrier), the prettiest boy of all, is Lucie's ostensible boyfriend, but she's had sex with the other two. Baptiste (Nicolas Nollet) is boy number four. It's not so good for the story but fine for the vicarious titillation value of the film that the clothes come off right away and there are many bed and swim scenes; and while there isn't much overt sex, there is much casual nude lolling around together among the nearly inseparable five. Pierre also has sex for pay with gay men and orgies with a local politico, and we get glimpses of that, too.

In a story based on a real event in provincial France, this inseparable group of young beauties is shattered when Pierre is found dead, riddled with blows. The cops draw a blank and Lucie initiates her own investigation aided by the other boys. When the solution comes, the crime remains incomprehensible, even though who did it had become predictable.

Pierre has an intensity you notice, and he sings. Lizzie Brocheré emotes, Guillaume Baché has a way of holding back that's arresting; but despite the film's obsessive concentration on these young people, they seem chosen not for their acting skill but because they're generically perfect looking, with the result that it takes much of the film to gather even a vague sense of what distinguishes one boy from the others.

People are understandably enamored of One to Another/Chacun sa nuit for its lovely sensuality. From that point of view, it's a pleasure to look at. But the crime story and the beefcake are at odds with each other, the pretentious philosophizing of the young people is a poor substitute for acting, and the too-randomly inter-cut flashbacks after the death to flesh out the superficial portraits weaken the momentum of the hunt. According the Le Monde's reviewer Jacques Mandelbaum, One to Another "rises to the challenge of achieving a strong confrontation between the filmmakers' hedonistic philosophy and a barbarous act that resists it." Is it our Puritanical Anglo-Saxon culture? Somehow this seems unconvincing. But the images are beautiful. Jean-Marc Barr's second film was called Too Much Flesh. Hmmm…… Opened in Paris September 20, 2006. To be shown at the Rendez-Vous with French Cinema at Lincoln Center March 7 and 10, and at the IFC Center March 8, 2007. US distributor: Netflix/Strand Releasing. Should do well in the DVD sales and rental market.
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