Private Fears In Public Places Review

Private Fears In Public Places
In Paris, six disparate people are looking for love, but as they all discover the city of romance can be a cruel place.

by Patrick Peters |
Published on
Release Date:

20 Jul 2007

Running Time:

123 minutes

Certificate:

TBC

Original Title:

Private Fears In Public Places

Beautifully photographed and designed, Alain Resnais’ adaptation of the Alan Ayckbourn stage play may lack the cinematic ingenuity of his Last Year At Marienbad, but its discussion of memory, time and solitude remains as acute as ever.

Resnais links over 50 short scenes to reveal how isolated people can be - even within supposedly close relationships. The ensemble playing is exemplary, with André Dussollier typically assured as the dapper estate agent whose guilty fascination with the graphic contents of a half-wiped videotape loaned to him by his religious assistant contrasts with younger sister Isabelle Carré’s naive belief in true love.

An insightful reflection on relationships and solitude.
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