‘Strayed’ is off the beaten path
SUSANNE PEREZ
It is June 1940 and thousands are trying to flee a German-occupied
Paris, and the roads are clogged with cars, trucks, carts and what
precious belongings they can hold.
Suddenly, a German plane passes overhead, and a blue sky is
raining bombs and bullets. A pretty young war widow, Odile
(Emmanuelle Beart), and her two children leap out of their car just
before it is hit and catches fire. A young man scoops up her little
girl and leads them into the relative safety of the woods.
Odile’s pre-teen son senses this guy’s survival instincts can help
his family, and so against his mother’s objections, he bribes Yvan
(Gaspard Ulliel) to guide them. They come across an elegant,
abandoned villa, unscathed by the war, where no one is likely to find
them.
How these people form an unlikely family unit and carve out a
rather nice existence in wartime is the basis for director Andre
Techine’s “Strayed.”
Based upon a short story, it’s an understated, quiet study of what
may happen when you’re cut off from the norm and can live any way you
choose.
A tense, exhausted Odile tries to maintain a semblance of normalcy
within her family, setting the table for each meal, doing laundry and
making the beds. She doesn’t trust this stranger and wants to find a
village where someone else can help her, perhaps believing her
situation is unique. She doesn’t like that the uneducated, mysterious
Yvan has no qualms about breaking the rules in order to survive.
One day, 17-year-old Yvan startles Odile by declaring he wants to
marry her. This triggers a subtle and surprising change in their
relationship, as she becomes ever more protective and reliant upon
this boy-man.
The pacing of “Strayed” is slow, especially for a 90-minute film,
and the ending is sad and somehow unfulfilling. Beart is one of the
leading actresses in her native France and very affecting in her
role. I wouldn’t say this is a bad movie, but it may not be for
everyone’s taste.
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
‘Shrek’ kingdom
not just for kids
This second installment of the “Shrek” series continues the
rollicking, good-natured fun of the original. The DreamWorks team has
taken the basic idea of the family film and created a virtually new
movie genre. Advancing what began with films like “Babe” and “Toy
Story,” “Shrek 2” is an animated, multi-level comedy satire that has
wide appeal to every age group.
It combines state-of-the- art computer graphics with snappy
dialogue voiced by very hip celebrities. It ripples with dozens of
quick-witted parodies of classic movie and television scenes aimed at
the parents in the theater. Add a fast-paced screenplay to innovative
concepts and you have a mile-a-minute story that will keep everyone
laughing and doesn’t leave any time for getting bored.
Eddie Murphy is hilarious once again as the short-tempered donkey
who sounds like a stand-up comic. This time he has competition for
the role of annoying talking animal from a swashbuckling cat. The
sultry voice of Puss In Boots is provided by Antonio Banderas. Mike
Myers and Cameron Diaz are the well-matched voices behind the
newlywed Shrek and Fiona. Their troubled visit to her parents in a
faraway kingdom sets in motion the many plot developments that
include warped versions of a sinister Fairy Godmother, the Three
Pigs, Three Blind Mice, Red Riding Hood and many other fairly tale
icons of childhood.
But with a plot that moves at lightning speed, “Shrek 2” avoids
being easily predictable. It turns the concept of “Happily Ever
After” on its head before turning it sideways then setting it right
again. This is one of those rare movies where the kids laugh at one
thing in a scene while the grown-ups laugh heartily at something else
that’s over the kids’ heads. With an opening weekend that exceeded
$100 million, we’re sure to see a lot more of the continuing
adventures of Shrek and Fiona.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.