Nothing to lose | Mother instinct





A single mother struggles to get her youngest son back who was placed in a foster home by social services.




Working night shifts in a bar in Brest, Sylvie (Virginie Efira, Love and forestsby Valérie Donzelli) must often leave his sons, Jean-Jacques (Félix Lefebvre, revealed in Summer 85, by François Ozon), an anxious and bulimic teenager, and Sofiane (Alexis Tonetti), a turbulent boy with learning difficulties. The latter having suffered a second degree burn on his chest while trying to make fries, was soon sent to a foster home.

With his brothers, Hervé (Arieh Worthalter, The Goldman trial, by Cédric Kahn) and Alain (Mathieu Demy), who are not great models of success, Sylvie, a loving and courageous mother, will have to fight to regain custody of Sofiane. Impulsive and thoughtless, at loggerheads with Miss Henry from social services (India Hair), Sylvie risks experiencing more setbacks than victories.

Coming from the documentary, Delphine Deloget delivers a first feature-length fiction film of remarkable maturity and with an undeniable concern for truth. Written with the collaboration of Camille Fontaine (Coco before Chanelby Anne Fontaine) and Olivier Demangel (creator of the series Tapie), the story of Nothing to lose is inspired by meetings with dozens of families and social workers made by the filmmaker. In this respect, the dialogues, both the mother’s lively repartees, the children’s words, the spats and the legal gibberish, prove to be of rare accuracy.

Effectively taking advantage of the Breton setting, the director takes a look full of empathy, devoid of judgment, on this modest family in crisis, which echoes that found in the middle paintings of Mike Leigh (Secrets and lies) and Ken Loach (Ladybird). Nothing to lose is also reminiscent of the cinema of the Dardenne brothers (Two days, one night) by the way the director of photography Guillaume Schiffman (Waiting Bojanglesby Regis Roinsard) relentlessly tracks the characters and the attentive editing of Béatrice Hermine (Valiant heartsby Mona Achache).

While she skillfully handles the ellipsis and effectively maintains the suspense, Delphine Deloget takes the viewer into a crescendo of emotions until the heartbreaking finale. Surrounded by an impeccable cast, at the heart of which stands out the sensitive interpretation of Félix Lefebvre, the splendid Virginie Efira, without makeup, hairstyle and soberly dressed, shines with new brilliance.

Nothing to lose is presented at the Cinémathèque québécoise and at the Cinéma Beaubien.

Nothing to lose

Social drama

Nothing to lose

Delphine Deloget

Virginie Efira, Félix Lefebvre, Arieh Worthalter, Mathieu Demy

1h50

8/10


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