One Fine Morning

One Fine Morning (2022)

05/10/2022

#Romance#Drama

Overview

With a father suffering from neurodegenerative disease, a young woman lives with her eight-year-old daughter. While struggling to secure a decent nursing home, she runs into an unavailable friend with whom she embarks on an affair.

Status: Released

Rating: 64%

Original language: FR

Budget: $0

Revenue: $1,380,392

Official website:
https://www.sonyclassics.com/film/onefinemorning

Details

Production Companies

Les Films Pelléas

Les Films Pelléas

Razor Film Produktion

Razor Film Produktion

ARTE France Cinéma

ARTE France Cinéma

BR

BR

MUBI

MUBI

Dauphin Films

Dauphin Films

CN6 Productions

CN6 Productions

Zack Films

Zack Films

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt13482828

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q107466664

Facebook: No data

Instagram: No data

X: No data

Cast

Reviews (1)

Review by: CinemaSerf

Written by: CinemaSerf on 2023-04-18T07:57:01.440Z

"Sandra" (Léa Seydoux) is at a crossroads in her life. Her ageing, academic, father (the scene-dominating Pascal Greggory) has been diagnosed with a neuro-degenerative disease that is pretty much robbing him of his quality of life. He is an acclaimed philosopher who finds his increasing lack of ability to think and to remember exasperating. Meantime, she also reconnects with her old friend "Clément" (Melvil Poupaud). He delights in being called a cosmo-chemist (he studies meteoric dust using a rather impressive mass spectrometer). It's clear from the outset that these two have the hots for each other and, despite the fact that he is married with a young son, they embark of quite a lively affair. She is juggling her affection for him while struggling to find an adequate facility for her father; he is having a crisis of conscience as he falls more deeply in love but has his own family to consider. That's about the height of it. Even with the underlying - and rather depressing - analysis of the care provision for her elderly and increasingly failing father adding some gravitas to the film, the story itself is all a rather lacklustre drama centred around two people who are actually quite selfish. They both have responsibilities and as you'd expect, as their relationship develops, these become predictable millstones that we can anticipate all too readily. It has aspects of a soap to it, and though both leads are easy on the eye, I don't think either really have enough here to allow their characters to develop nor to really engage with an audience that has seen this sort of narrative unfold many, many, times before. It looks good - the filming and performances from the younger children are very natural, but at the end I was wondering what was different here. It will work fine on the television, but I doubt I will remember much about it in a fortnight.

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