Summer Hours in the UK.
Olivier Assayas's
Summer Hours "is a quiet and lyrical movie that poses a pertinent question in a time where philanthropists like
Eli Broad are wresting power from museums: if you are fortunate enough to inherit art, what should you do with it?"
Laura Allsop, writing in
Art Review, finds the film instructive.
The
Guardian's
Xan Brooks finds
Summer Hours to be "an airy Chekhovian miniature in which
Charles Berling and
Juliette Binoche play bourgeois siblings parcelling up the estate of their dead mother and the great artist she shacked up with. In his unobtrusive fashion, Assayas poses telling questions about the ways we lay our past to rest."
"With a seemingly loose but meticulously assembled narrative in the style of his earlier ensemble piece
Late August, Early September, it chronicles the interactions between the various characters with psychological subtlety and precision, even as it explores the changing roles played by art, property, work and blood-ties in an increasingly globalised world," writes
Geoff Andrew in
Time Out. "Perhaps the characters are finally a little too uniformly decent, but it would be churlish to bemoan the generosity of spirit in a film so beautifully performed, intelligently written and fluently directed."
"Assayas seems to flip-flop between jagged postmodernism and stately neo-classicism, and it makes him one of the most restless talents in current cinema," writes the
Telegraph's
Tim Robey. "
Summer Hours fits comfortably into the second bracket... It has Assayas's favourite themes - commerce, identity, globalisation - all over it, but more subtly than of late, and the film's elegant upholstering makes it his most enjoyable."
It "recalls the late great works of master miniaturist
Claude Sautet," suggests
Anthony Quinn in the
Independent.
The
Evening Standard's
Derek Malcolm even finds it "reminds us gently and persuasively of the films of the great
Renoir."
Online listening tip. The
Observer's
Jason Solomons talks with Assayas.
Earlier:
Daniel Kasman (
Auteurs' Notebook) and
Karina Longworth (
SpoutBlog).
Posted by dwhudson at July 18, 2008 5:44 AM