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Critic’s Pick

‘Last Summer’ Review: A Shocking Affair to Remember

Few directors get as deeply under the skin as Catherine Breillat, a longtime provocateur who tests the limits of what the world thinks women should do and say and be.

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A teenage boy and a woman lie on a blanket on the grass.
Samuel Kircher, left, and Léa Drucker in “Last Summer.”Credit...Sideshow/Janus Films
Last Summer
NYT Critic’s Pick
Directed by Catherine Breillat
Drama, Thriller
Not Rated
1h 44m

When Anne, the elegant, enigmatic protagonist in Catherine Breillat’s “Last Summer,” walks in a room, she holds your gaze as formidably as she holds those of everyone in this startling, perverse French movie. A lawyer, wife, mother and sister, Anne likes sheath dresses and high heels, tasteful antiques and a sense of order. She’s serenely self-possessed, and everything in her life is just so, which suggests that she’s either invincible or waiting to break. Both are in play when she abandons herself in a shocking, recklessly consuming affair.

Few directors get as deeply under the skin as Breillat, a longtime, reliably interesting provocateur who tests the limits of what the world thinks women should do and say and be. Breillat is interested in complexity, not orthodoxy (feminist or otherwise), in autonomy and subjugation, and in all the ways that pleasure and desire can take violent hold of minds and bodies. She was in her 20s when she directed her first feature, “A Real Young Girl” (1976), about a teenager’s sexual coming-of-age. It’s a messy, jolting movie; there aren’t many filmmakers who shock you like Breillat does and with such supremely natural ease.

Anne, played by a superb Léa Drucker, seems wholly satisfied in her world. She and her loving, attentive husband, Pierre (Olivier Rabourdin), have two sweet girls, and live in a large, handsome suburban home. She’s close to her sister, Mina (Clotilde Courau), and Anne’s work seems satisfying and perhaps even important: She advocates for victims of sexual abuse and in cases involving parental custodianship. Outwardly, her life looks ideal, if maybe overly comfortable, and its frictionless surfaces — especially in a French movie about upper-class people — seem primed for disruption. Even so, nothing about her suggests that she will soon lose herself in an affair with her 17-year-old stepson, Théo (Samuel Kircher).

When “Last Summer" opens, Théo is living with his mother and has just been arrested. Pierre has decided to bring his son back home with him, a decision he explains to Anne while the couple are in their bedroom, an intimate setting that is as meaningful as it is banal. As Pierre hurriedly packs his bag, Breillat discreetly pushes the camera closer to him as he and an offscreen Anne talk. The scene is brief, and seemingly purely informational. Yet right after Pierre says that Théo punched a teacher, Breillat cuts to Anne who’s busily changing her clothes. Her dress is hiked over her face, exposing her trim body and pretty bra.

Within minutes, Breillat has introduced both her characters and their world with brisk narrative economy and a sly, telegraphing conflation of sex and violence: the bedroom, the couple, the son, the punch, the lingerie. The movie has scarcely begun yet everything, including the complacency and first stirrings of trouble, is in place. These stirrings abruptly turn into klaxons when Théo arrives shortly thereafter, and Anne goes to speak to him. The moment that he appears onscreen — he’s on the bed in his room, his messy dark curls cascading over his face — it’s clear that he is this movie’s version of Chekhov’s gun.

It gets messy fast. Anne and Théo aren’t close (you sense that they never have been), and there’s a grudging resentment bordering on hostility in how they engage with each other at first. Breillat reveals the complexity of their relationship with scalpel-like precision. The early tension between Anne and Théo is palpable, and partly a consequence of their claims on Pierre. Breillat isn’t a flashy visual stylist, but she makes every image count in “Last Summer.” There’s meaning in each smile and bit of skin, as when Breillat folds in shots of Théo and Pierre with bared torsos, the beauty of youth answered by the poignancy of age.

Breillat offers different possible reasons Anne sleeps with Théo, which happens while Pierre is on a conveniently timed business trip. Anne may be bored with Pierre; she may be drawn to Théo’s youth, his charming curls, his fragile insolence, willowy body and vulnerability. She may be bored, fear death, get off on power. She may just want to get off. Breillat leaves it to the viewer to parse while she focuses on the pleasure it awakens in Anne. When, in one scene, Breillat holds on a close-up of Anne’s postcoital face for a very long 45 or so seconds, it doesn’t read just as a vision of ecstasy. It is also an expression of Breillat’s essential concerns.

“Last Summer” is complex, tricky, at times very uncomfortable and thoroughly engrossing. Part of what makes the movie enthralling, at least in its first squirmy half, is the spectacle of watching a character rush into a morally abject, altogether questionable and seemingly obvious disaster; it’s like watching a slow-moving car crash. I don’t think that is necessarily how Breillat sees it, mind you. That only makes the movie more interesting even if it doesn’t prepare you for what comes next in a story about a woman who — after entrancing and appalling you — emerges as both more monstrous and more human than you’re prepared for.

Last Summer
Not rated. In French, with subtitles. Running time: 1 hour 44 minutes. In theaters.

Manohla Dargis is the chief film critic for The Times. More about Manohla Dargis

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section C, Page 5 of the New York edition with the headline: Rushing Into an Obvious Disaster. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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