Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe | Of love and fresh paint

In 1893, a painter met a manufacturer of artificial flowers who would be his muse and companion for nearly 50 years.



A painter from a good family, Pierre Bonnard (Vincent Macaigne, placid) one day brings into his studio a manufacturer of artificial flowers who claims to be called Marthe de Méligny (Cécile de France, fiery) and being an orphaned aristocrat. The years go by. With Marthe as his main model, muse and companion, Pierre became more and more successful with his paintings.

Unable to tolerate worldly affairs, Marthe keeps Pierre at their country house, far from his friends, the painters Vuillard (Grégoire Leprince-Ringuet, insipid) and Monet (André Marcon, rigid) and, above all, from the pianist and patron Misia Sert (Anouk Grinberg, inspired but histrionic). The years go by. Enter Renée Monchaty (Stacy Martin, bland), fine arts student and Pierre’s new model.

Nearly 15 years after realizing Seraphinemagnificent portrait of the painter Séraphine de Senlis featuring Yolande Moreau, Martin Provost (Violet) interferes in the intimacy of a painter he admires and the mysterious figure who haunts a third of his works. This time, the filmmaker was not completely touched by grace.

Written with Marc Abdelnour, Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe tells in an elliptical way an uncaptivating life as a couple made up of arguments and reconciliations, separations and reunions, lies and half-truths over 50 years. Drawn in broad strokes, the characters border on caricature, particularly the female characters, all of whom are unlikeable, even detestable. So a country lunch with friends turns into a grotesque argument coupled with a competition for the most hysterical character.

To drown it all out, Michael Galasso throws in a soundtrack consisting of a haunting rhythmic cell that he repeats ad nauseam. Fortunately, the visuals greatly outweigh the music in this wise biographical drama. If he neglects to deal with the Nabi movement, a revolutionary post-impressionist artistic movement of which Bonnard was one of the leading figures, Martin Provost pays a vibrant tribute to the latter’s work. And, very briefly, to that of Marthe Bonnard, known as Marthe Solange, who, taking advantage of a disenchanted break, distinguished herself as a painter.

With the magnificent photo and careful framing of Guillaume Schiffman, Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe immerses the viewer in the lush nature, vibrant colors and warm interiors that inspired the painter of happiness his most beautiful paintings. The result is a trivial marital drama crossed by lively pages of art history where we flirt with the divine.

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Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe

Biographical drama

Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe

Martin Provost

With Vincent Macaigne, Cécile de France, Anouk Grinberg, Stacy Martin

2:02 a.m.
Indoors

6/10


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