Faustine Cros’s documentary revisits home videos from her childhood through fresh eyes having learned as an adult what her young self had missed
There comes a point in every child’s life when they start seeing their parents not solely as all-powerful protectors, but also as human beings, flaws and all. Spurred by the discovery of her mother’s attempt to kill herself, Belgian film-maker Faustine Cros revisits countless home videos from her childhood through fresh eyes. In light of what happened, these seemingly innocuous family moments lay bare the stark paradox of motherhood, where feelings of joy and entrapment collide.
Once a successful makeup artist, Cros’s mother Valérie put her career on pause after the birth of her children, but the transition was a difficult one. While much of the film is constructed around old footage shot by her film-maker father, Cros brilliantly inserts her own directorial gaze, as she sifts through the grains of the past; through incisive yet delicate editing, she carefully isolates decades-spanning images that reveal the emotional cracks behind everyday routines. From the stress of a grocery trip gone wrong to Valérie’s quiet sigh after a chaotic dinner, these small moments of exasperation, loneliness and exhaustion, when threaded together, convey the sheer scale of labour that goes into domestic work. It is perhaps revealing that, now in her 60s, Valérie rarely cooks.
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Source link : https://www.theguardian.com/film/article/2024/aug/12/a-life-like-any-other-review-wonderfully-moving-look-back-at-a-mothers-resilience
Author : Phuong Le
Publish date : 2024-08-12 06:00:35
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