Anaïs in Love

2021 [FRENCH]

Comedy / Drama / Romance

IMDb Rating 6.4/10 10 1474 1.5K

Plot summary

Anaïs is thirty and broke. She has a lover, but she’s not sure she loves him anymore. She meets Daniel, who immediately falls for her. But Daniel lives with Émilie – whom Anaïs also falls for.



September 05, 2023 at 08:02 AM

Director

Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet

Top cast

Anaïs Demoustier as Anaïs
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi as Emilie Ducret
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
899.28 MB
1280*694
French 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 37 min
P/S ...
1.81 GB
1920*1042
French 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 37 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by thoughtcat-1 9 / 10

Ridiculously charming French romance

This title popped up in my Amazon Prime and looked like something light and fun. My experience of recent French films has been mixed, with many being overly erotic and taking themselves a bit seriously. This film though was a delight from start to finish. The main character Anais, young and beautiful, absent-minded and clumsy and quintessentially French, dashes around everywhere in a series of gorgeous summer frocks. She is having a relationship with a handsome man her own age but it's already over practically within the first scene. In the very next scene Anais is enrapturing a married man twice her age, although he goes on to leave her frustrated. With a summer job at a symposium (she is a student) in the lavish French countryside, she encounters Emilie, a similarly beautiful 50-something married academic, and quite unexpectedly falls passionately in love with this older woman. I won't spoil it from there, but suffice to say I laughed and cried. I had to rewind and watch the last 15 minutes again as it was so beautifully done. I lamented "overly erotic" films earlier in this review and this title was rated 18 by Prime but it is perfectly pitched, containing one of the most sensual, tasteful and romantic love scenes I think I've ever watched, without being over the top. I'll be buying the DVD of this film as I can imagine wanting to watch it over a bottle of French red many times in the future. This film is everything anyone would ever want from a modern French romance, perhaps because the story is everything anyone would ever want from love itself.

Reviewed by ferguson-6 6 / 10

she's a whirlwind

Greetings again from the darkness. Barely five minutes in, we have concluded that Anais is a whirlwind of activity. She's behind on her rent and yet turns the conversation with her landlord to fruit juice and a smoke alarm. This is the first feature film from writer-director Charline Bougeois-Tacquet who benefits greatly with the presence of lead actor Anais Demoustier. I have no idea if the name is a coincidence or whether this was written with her in mind, but we quickly realize that Anais is a mess ... a charming mess and one for which hope remains.

Anais is always late. She walks, runs, or rides her bicycle everywhere. Her bright red lipstick is always on display, and she's claustrophobic and prefers to sleep alone. The constant twinkle in her eye means folks look past her seemingly carefree approach to real life, as she makes the best of each landing spot in her directionless path(s) through each day. We observe and learn all of these things on top of the big secret she's been keeping from her boyfriend Raoul (Christophe Montenez). During the exchange they have when he breaks up with her, she says, "You are violent in your inertia." This may be my favorite line of the year. What others view as stability and dependability, Anais views as inertia and unappealing.

When Anais takes Daniel (Denys Podalydes) as a lover, it's the older, married man who ends it by stating he doesn't want his life to change. Anais shrugs and turns her attention and affections to Daniel's wife, Emilie (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, HUMAN CAPITAL, sister of Carla Bruni). Emilie is a famous author and Anais worms her way in by tracking Emilie to Normandy where she's holding a symposium. Writing, books, and literature play subtle yet key roles throughout ... as if Anais is trying to live out so many of the stories she's read.

If there is anything lacking here, it's traditional character conflict. Even the surprise collision of Daniel, Emilie, and Anais at the symposium doesn't pack the dramatic or comedic punch we would expect. Anais is never much concerned, so neither are we as viewers. We are too enamored and intrigued with her energy and spirit to let real life cause consternation. The subplot with Anais' mother is the closest we see Anais come to 'normal' emotions, but even getting to that point, is yet another whirlwind.

In theaters April 29, 2022 and On Demand May 6, 2022.

Reviewed by georgioskarpouzas 8 / 10

The unbearable lightness of being

This particular movie is a testament of the moral climate of our times. The central character is a young woman living in the affluent West whose actions are dictated by her purely subjective criteria of her own emotional and carnal truth. She is not subject to any outside objective moral code( the obligation to pay the rent to her landlady, the duty to inform intelligibly the foreigners to whom she sublets her appartment about the dangers of certain electrical devices, the fact that her older lover has already a wife, the need to honor her obligations towards her academic supervisor) and everything and everyone has to succumb to her personal quest for self-realization and romantic/sexual interest.

She is very charming and lovable( the female lead is ideal for the role) but hardly a paragon of domestic virtue or a model of a responsible citizen.

She is the embodiment of the western ideal of hedonistic self-actualisation which makes Islamists and Russian ideologues and Chinese Communist Party officials so furious in its insistence on personal choice over tradition and the demands of the collectivity.

Of course this bacchanalian celebration of "anything goes" stumbles over the disapproval of venerable if declining institutions of the West itself such as the Roman Catholic Church. I quote from paragraph 61 of the Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium issued by Pope Francis: "...We recognize how in a culture where each person wants to be bearer of his or her own subjective truth it becomes difficult for citizens to devise a common plan which transcends individual gain and personal ambitions." There is a saying attributed to de Gaulle: "How can you govern a country that has 245 kinds of cheese?" The French officials of today must come to terms with the reality of inspiring collective action and prosaic restraint to millions of self-willed hedonists if the behaviour depicted in the movie is representative of a large enough segment of modern French society.

Young and beautiful and irresponsible as an Olympian goddess Anais lives her life as she pleases giving to the pleasure principle precedence over the reality principle if one is to use Freudian terminology. Is such an attitude towards life feasible and sustainable in a long-term or collective level? Is it mature from a psychological standpoint? Is it sinful from a religious point of view? Can significant segments of the affluent West live in such a manner overcoming the realm of necessity and achieving the realm of freedom?

It is a seemingly light movie but if engaged in a deeper manner it raises fundamental questions.

Anais Demoustier and Valeria Bruni Tedeschi give stellar performances and their romance will be included in the anthology of cinematic lesbian romances. Comic interludes as well as certain scenes with sombre undertones interspersed with the frantic activity of Paris and the beauty of the French countryside make for a very appealing result which reinforces the image of the West in general and France in particular as a permissive heaven-on-earth or a society where social bonds are so loose that its collapse is imminent-depending on your point of view.

Either way a must-see if one wants to feel the modern western zeitgeist.

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