Quite  a good share of Claude  Chabrol's  tasty cocktail of romance and jealousy, A  Girl  Cut  in Two,  has at peace by before you realise that, in essence, goose egg much of consequence has happened. This  is not a bad thing, and is more a will to Chabrol's  talent behind the tv camera that he's able to keep his film engaging well past the point that it should have any real right to be. It  gives the film a certain drifting quality, even if nonpareil knows that something more momentous is waiting in the wings.
Chabrol,  who likewise co-wrote the script with C�cile  Maistre,  based his story in some measuring rod upon the sensational case of famous architect Stanford  White's  dispatch at Madison  Square  Garden's  rooftop field in 1906. A  definitive "murder of the c" case, the White  slay had a plethora of salacious details for titillation, a number of which Chabrol  cannily appropriates for his possess scenario. Set  in the present day in Lyon,  A  Girl  Cut  in Two  seems at first gear like another portrait of an ennui-cloaked artiste, whose fame and fortune no longer excites him. Charles  Saint-Denis  (Fran�ois  Berl�and,  splendid in his understatement here just as he was in Tell  No  One)  is an aging novelist of incomparable fame surviving the double-dyed life. He  lives on a beautiful estate, is feted for his work almost nonstop, has a wife wHO doesn't appear to notice or care about his habitual flirt, and the money to do basically whatever he wants. Being  a famous novelist on the prowl, it doesn't take tenacious for Saint-Denis  to cypher in on one of Lyon's  about attractive individual females, the quite young and innocently beautiful Gabrielle  Deneige  (Ludivine  Sagnier).
While  Deneige,  who lives at home with her eminently reasonable and disapproving mother, is falling desperately in sexual love with the much senior Saint-Denis  (who's something of an arrogant buffoon, in addition to being a first-degree manipulator of the impressionable young), she's likewise being chased by a man her own eld. Looking  like a Gallic  Jude  Law  who's been on a months-long booze-up, Paul  Gaudens  (Beno�t  Magimel,  marvelously dissolute) is the scion of a local pharmaceutical hazard, as blase as he is flush. A  snakelike avatar of louche misbehavior, Gaudens  is all pout and preen, lazing about in tightfitting velvet coats and lachrymation up the town in his bouncy sports cable car when he's not scheming how to make Deneige  his.
In  no particular hurriedness to propel his tarradiddle to its conclusion, Chabrol  takes his time line drawing the attractions and manias in this eminently neat little love triangle, and provides stack of entertainment along the way. Sagnier's  beauty is played to maximum effect (she looks here like a fresh-faced and younger Penelope  Ann  Miller),  as is her oddly innocent inexperience. When  Saint-Denis  decides to prepare her in the darker mysteries of desire (a point at which the film skirts and narrowly avoids ludicrousness), she's emotively torn between her desire for love and an approving father figure, and left emotionally broken between the deuce. Having  Gaudens  (who's as used to getting what he wants as is Saint-Denis)  leap impetuously into this fragile relationship has an poignantly bull-in-the-china-shop effect.
Once  Chabrol  starts trying to tie his story together, however, the briefly intoxicating mist of desire, jealousy, and rampant wealth dissipates quite chop-chop. Although  this was to the highest degree likely the desired burden, blowing away the na�ve attitudes held by his characters and showing them the results of their actions, it doesn't needs make for a ordered or touching story. Although  A  Girl  Cut  in Two  does come with an initially heady and alcoholic give up, that proves to be a fugitive impression. Once  viewers ar done with Chabrol's  presciently crafted only fleeting film, its personal effects are quite an easily tossed off; no worries roughly hangovers here.
Aka  La  Fille  coup�e en deux, A  Girl  Cut  in Half.
That'd  be the top half.
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