They meet in the supermarket. It is a simple arrangement and yet it's not even that.
Nothing is planned. She goes there, hoping to see him, and when she does, they shop
and talk a little, and she waits every day for that moment, because being with him makes
her feel better about herself.
She has three children and a husband to feed and has been unemployed for over a year.
She buys special offers and processed foods, because they are cheap. They live in a
highrise and she worries about her weight.
"Time goes by," she tells him. "I look back and nothing's happened."
He has been unemployed for a shorter period. He goes to interviews for middle
management jobs, without success. He is married to his second wife. They have a child.
He says he is hyperactive and can't sit still. He smokes like a chimney and has a restless
energy that is attractive to her.
The simplicity of the storyline is mirrored in the roughness of the handheld
cinematography. What should be artless in its denial of studio aids is without pretension.
As a short history of a relationship, it has an honesty that cuts through convention.
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi's performance is breathtakingly brilliant. Marie's lack of
self-esteem comes across as a willingness to please and yet, beneath it, her feelings are
in turmoil. Patrick Dell'Isola plays Pierre as a man trapped by his choices, in a marriage
that only reminds him of failure, at an age when rejection has become commonplace.
Writer/director Marion Vernoux explores the complexity of an emotional journey, where
hopes and dreams seldom coexist for long and words are like flags fluttering in the wind.