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La Vie en Rose Streaming

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Movie Title: La Vie en Rose
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Don’t conception to witness this film and then go out for a provocative night on the town. You will be so spent after the one hundred forty-one minutes of this gut-wrenching film that when the lights approach on at the raze, you’ll need a itsy-bitsy to figure out where you are, and then additional downtime to process all you’ve seen. Days later, you’ll unruffled be thinking about this carve of life–and Edith Piaf.

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Piaf’s yarn is well known to her long-time fans–brought up in a brothel, wrested from the only life she knew by her father so they could join the circus, her teen years on the streets, her “rescue” by a crime figure who gave her the initiate to her career, and, ultimately, her international success and final illness. She was always outmoded, sickly, malnourished, and wildly morose. She was often on drugs or alcohol, and she was always in search of good cherish (not finding it till unhurried in her life) . All this is depicted here with its horrors and its rare moments of tenderness, the cinematography (Tetsuo Nagata) so knowing that the realistic, dismal settings invite the reader’s emotional entry into them and exploration of them.

Marion Cotillard becomes Piaf, a physical likeness that is uncanny in its realism (one wonders if she can ever play another allotment without conjuring up Piaf’s image), and her emotional connection to Piaf’s music is total. Her song performances are absolutely flawless, as are her gestures, and the only clue that she is lip-synching is the unmistakable Piaf inform the emerges from her mouth. Louis Leplee (Gerard Depardieu) as the nightclub owner whose assassinate by organized crime draws Edith in for questioning, shows the top-notch care he has for Edith and the tough face of a man who has seen and done it all.

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Marcel Cerdan, the middleweight boxer who captures her heart (Jean-Pierre Martins), gives her something to live for, besides her music–at least for a while–and it is genuinely affecting here to glimpse how earthy and unaffected he is in her presence. The supporting actors, all French, are outstanding, and few viewers will forget Emmanuelle Seigner, playing prostitute Titine, who cared for Edith as a child.

The film belongs to Cotillard, however, and all aspects of the film, from the vivid writing of Olivier Dahan (who also directed) and Isabelle Sobelman, to film editing (especially the lip-synching to Piaf’s songs), and the sets, costuming, and makeup, are designed to enhance her performance. The film follows no chronology, jumping from her childhood to her primitive age and then to some of the high points of her career, creating an impressionistic film of some of the signal moments in her life. It is difficult to imagine any biopic that will ever near finish to this one in its power, but then, again, it’s difficult to imagine any singer who will ever prefer the world’s imagination in quite the intention that Piaf did. n Mary Whipple

I wouldn’t be comfortable calling La Vie en Rose (La Mome), the life of Edith Piaf, one of the immense biographical films until I have a chance to gawk it once or twice more. What I’m obvious of is that Marion Cotillard’s portrayal of Piaf from Piaf’s early teens until Piaf died at 47 is one of the most incredible performances I’ve ever seen on a movie hide. Piaf had an fabulous life, was an unbelievable personality as well as being perhaps France’s greatest singer. Cotillard simply remakes herself into this willful, self-destructive, selfish, helpful, melodramatic, microscopic creature — Piaf was only 4′ 8″ astronomical — of dramatic vocal genius.

Piaf grew up on the streets of Paris. Her life was one crises after another, some of her making, some not. We meet her as a child, when her mother abandoned her. Her father, a soldier in WWI and a contortionist in cramped traveling circuses, disappeared for long period of time. At one point before puberty she lived for quite a while with her paternal grandmother, who ran a brothel. She helped her father work at one of those circuses. They survived as street entertainers in Paris. She finally had enough and struck out on her bear, making a small money singing on the streets, giving great of it to a local pimp for protection. She had a child who died of meningitis. When she was 20 she was discovered by an “impresario” who ran a nightclub. Louis Leplee renamed her Piaf. When he was murdered in what seemed to be a gang hit, she was build through the public wringer by the police and the French press. Her fame grew. During WWII she agreed to verbalize at POW camps so the French prisoners could be photographed with Piaf by the Germans as evidence of how cheerful the prisoners were. Piaf was a member of the Resistance. She took copies of the photographs and arranged for the Resistance to perform counterfeit passports for 150 prisoners. She returned to the camps with the passports and managed to have them distributed to the prisoners under the eyes of the Germans. She was either valorous or willfully fatalistic. The Germans never seemed to realize what this microscopic, internationally known singer was doing. After the war, she was acclaimed. She had renowned esteem affairs, including Yves Montand and French middleweight boxer Marcel Cerdan. Cerdan, whom she loved, was killed in a plane break. She drank heavily, took drugs, and her health continued to deteriorate. She suffered from rheumatism, severe arthritis, a liver that barely functioned. She became addicted to morphine and continued to drink heavily.

And she sang and sang and sang. She could get a child’s jump-rope song sound like an obsession to lost like. Piaf had a mammoth tell and she knew how to exhaust it. She preferred simple sunless dresses and a spotlight when she performed, creating a highly dramatic image of this cramped, shadowy face and her two expressive hands. Her songs were about like, loss, death, memories, hope that was glimmering and hope that had died. She had a vibrato that seemed to throb in the heart. When she died at 47, the drink and the drugs, the losses and tragedies, the self-destructive willfulness and the arthritis had turned her into the ruined shell of the teen-ager who sang on Paris streets. Not a life I would have wanted, even if I’d traded for her talent, but it was her life and it became a stout melodrama powered by her unusual sigh.

For Americans, perhaps her most familiar song is La Vie En Rose. With Mack David’s soppy lyrics, there was a time when it couldn’t be avoided, including Piaf’s French version. But the song that evokes the most memories, and the one that closes the movie and summarizes her life, is the song Piaf first sang unbiased three years before her death, “Non, je ne regrette rien.”

Non, rien de rien,

Non, je ne regrette rien,

Ni le bien qu’on m’a fait,

Ni le mal, tout ça m’est bien égal.

Non, rien de rien,

Non, je ne regrette rien,

C’est payé, balayé, oublié,

Je me fous du passé…

The song roughly translates as “I don’t regret a thing. What has happened has happened and has been paid for. Neither the friendly done to me, nor the bad;

to me, they’re all the same. No, I regret nothing. Because my life, because my joys, today, inaugurate with you.”

The movie La Vie en Rose is dramatically and almost lushly photographed. We don’t have a simple linear epic line; we withhold attractive relieve and forth among the times of her life. The juxtapositions between the child, the girl, the young woman, the star, the prematurely stale force of talent and willfulness, makes us need to pay attention but it also gives us some opinion of the chaos of her life. Marion Cotillard is wonderful as she makes us gain in this self-destructive and moving person. We really forget about Cotillard and can only focus on this shrimp body, expansive deny and an irregular, arresting face made up of gargantuan eyes, blood red lips, and plucked, thin-lined eye-brows.

Personally, self-destruction after awhile makes me impatient and irritated. There are too many things to do to ruin one’s life on a diet of willfulness and selfishness, even if one is gifted with grand talent. I was mesmerized by Piaf, her life and her songs, but at times I felt like telling her to ease up on the drama. I allege, given her life, distinguished should be forgiven or at least understood. As Roger Ebert has said, “Nothing in her early life taught her to count on permanence or loyalty. What she counted on was singing, champagne, infatuation and morphine.” La Vie en Rose is a movie well worth seeing.
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