Wendy Ide 

Lie With Me review – handsome but predictable French drama

Based on a bestselling novel, this tale of a middle-aged author who returns to his home town to reconnect with his romantic past is oddly insular and fussy
  
  

Victor Belmondo and Guillaume de Tonquédec in Lie With Me.
Striking cinematography: Victor Belmondo and Guillaume de Tonquédec in Lie With Me. Photograph: PR

A celebrated middle-aged author returns, for the first time in 35 years, to his home town in the Cognac-producing region in south-western France. Stéphane (Guillaume de Tonquédec) has been asked to give a keynote speech, but his motives for accepting the invitation have more to do with reconnecting with his own romantic past. He bonds with Lucas (Victor Belmondo), a young man who, it turns out, is the son of Stéphane’s long-lost first love.

Adapted from an autobiographical novel by Philippe Besson and weaving together two timelines, this is a handsome but ploddingly predictable drama. The striking wide-screen cinematography gives an impression of generous scope and openness. But in fact, like Stéphane himself, the storytelling is oddly insular and fussy. The highlight here is a supporting character: the longsuffering event organiser Gaëlle, played by Guilaine Londez with a huge, over-stretched smile and the kind of clenched-jawed positivity that seems to teeter on the brink of psychosis.

Watch a trailer for Lie With Me.
 

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