An Affair to Remember
Like
Neil LaBute, Frédéric Fonteyne uses an anonymous setting to reach for universal
themes.
Try
to resist the urge to yell "Focus!" during the first five minutes or
so of An Affair of Love. It's been a while since we've seen a
director actively use such tools as focus and color to hint at deeper truths,
but Frédéric Fonteyne (Max and Bobo) knows what he's doing. For the
streets of
They're simply presented to us
as Her (Nathalie Baye) and Him (Sergi Lopez), both recalling a shared incident
in their past, and recounting it, in different locations, to the same faceless
Interviewer (Jacques Viala), with occasionally conflicting details. The
anonymous trappings are similar to those of Neil LaBute's films, which in turn
borrowed them from the stage, and the effect is similar, forcing us to judge
people by their actions in the present, as well as keeping us from becoming
detached because we can't relate. By boiling the characters down to the most
basic emotions that we all have, and eliminating lifestyle-specific
idiosyncrasies, we can enter the world of the story with ease.
If you're not a fan of LaBute,
however, don't panic: These characters are a lot nicer to one another than his
manipulative predators tend to be. In fact, the story arc is almost LaBute in
reverse: Characters seeking a superficial relationship inadvertently make a
deeper connection, then worry whether that's going to
hurt the other person. "It was a pornographic affair...We were just there
for sex," says the woman, to start us off (in fact, the film's French
title is Une Liaison Pornographique, presumably altered so the raincoat
crowd wouldn't get the wrong idea), as she recounts the story of how, finding
herself single for quite some time, she finally decided to place a personal ad
for a man to help fulfill her long-time fantasy. What that fantasy is, exactly,
we never know; again, it's almost beside the point. The man, who has seen the
ad in a magazine he claims to read because it has good articles, is more
nervous than his date, but is nonetheless willing to give it a go. The fantasy
is fulfilled behind closed doors in a bright red hotel (eerily reminiscent of
The idea behind the arrangement
is that neither one is to learn anything personal about the other, so that the
entire relationship can be based simply on sex. But as much as they (and many
of us in the real world) would like to believe such a thing is possible, the
reality is trickier. He invites her to dinner. They enjoy it more than they
have any other date, because the awkward sex thing is already out of the way.
Then she wants to make love (defined here as regular old horizontal sex, not
necessarily an act of true love), and for the first time we get to watch. "Sex
in movies is either hell or heaven, but never between the two," she says,
making the point that real-life sex is usually more complicated. But this time
it's pure heaven. That the act takes place in a blue room is also no accident;
up until now, we had assumed the whole place was a bright, lusty red. Like the
relationship itself, there turns out to be more to the hotel than meets the
eye.
But it would be too easy for Her and Him to fall into one another's arms forever just
yet. Complications ensue, many of them emotional, but a strange old couple also
shows up, for contrast: lifelong partners who are
utterly dependent upon one another, yet cannot stand to be in the same room.
The tension builds: Is any kind of emotional investment too much? There's a heart-stopping
moment of tension after She and He have suggested that
they may never meet again, when She walks into their usual cafe, and it looks
as though She might miss Him, seated in a different chair than usual. Even
though we know nothing about the background of either character, we have become
invested in their relationship, and understand how high the stakes must be for
them.
Of course, the scenes in the
present do depict them as separate, but one never knows; you want to believe
that perhaps they'll turn out to have been interviewed in the same house, one
that they were married in, perhaps? And would such an ending ruin the purity of
the anonymous affair, or vindicate it somehow? That the film encourages us to
think about such things, without forcing the (very minimalist) score or
dramatic arc to dictate our conclusions is what makes the movie stand out, and
ultimately makes it worthy of comparison to the darker works of Mr. LaBute, who
uses slightly different means to the same end.