Coming Soon
GOLDEN EIGHTIES
1986
Director
Chantal Akerman
Starring
Delphine Seyrig
Myriam Boyer
Fanny Cottençon
Runtime
96 minutes
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Chantal Akerman’s shopping mall musical comedy!? After her successes in the 1970s, Akerman turned toward the pleasures of popular cinema with a playful series of comedies and love stories, culminating in this extraordinary multi-character musical, set entirely in a shopping mall. A stylish, bittersweet look at the romantic tribulations of an assortment of shop owners and retail workers, the film evokes THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG in its charm, but with a distinctly feminist bent.
With songs co-written by Akerman and Marc Herouet, the film leads us through the tangled predicaments of clothing-shop owner Jeanne (Delphine Seyrig), who finds herself torn when her long-lost G.I. love, Eli (filmmaker John Berry), looks her up after 40 years; her son Robert (Nicolas Tronc), who is infatuated with Lili (Fanny Cottençon), a salon manager who in turn is having an affair with its owner, married gangster Monsieur Jean (Jean-François Balmer); hairdresser Mado (pop singer Lio), who has a crush on Robert; and coffee-bar proprietor Sylvie (Myriam Boyer), who pines for her boyfriend who’s gone to work in America.
For this utterly delightful passion project, which she described as a postmodern cross between women’s cinema, Jewish literature, and musicals, Akerman collaborated with an extraordinary/unlikely dream team of writers—DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN screenwriter Leora Barish, veteran Truffaut/Rivette/Resnais scenarist Jean Gruault, former Cahiers du Cinéma critic Pascal Bonitzer, and filmmaker Henry Bean.
"Akerman links erotic crises to political ones via choreography; she sets crowds of colorfully clad customers and employees in motion as they mouth the songs’ droll, bouncy lyrics (which Akerman wrote), balanced blithely between calamity and apocalypse." - Richard Brody, The New Yorker
With songs co-written by Akerman and Marc Herouet, the film leads us through the tangled predicaments of clothing-shop owner Jeanne (Delphine Seyrig), who finds herself torn when her long-lost G.I. love, Eli (filmmaker John Berry), looks her up after 40 years; her son Robert (Nicolas Tronc), who is infatuated with Lili (Fanny Cottençon), a salon manager who in turn is having an affair with its owner, married gangster Monsieur Jean (Jean-François Balmer); hairdresser Mado (pop singer Lio), who has a crush on Robert; and coffee-bar proprietor Sylvie (Myriam Boyer), who pines for her boyfriend who’s gone to work in America.
For this utterly delightful passion project, which she described as a postmodern cross between women’s cinema, Jewish literature, and musicals, Akerman collaborated with an extraordinary/unlikely dream team of writers—DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN screenwriter Leora Barish, veteran Truffaut/Rivette/Resnais scenarist Jean Gruault, former Cahiers du Cinéma critic Pascal Bonitzer, and filmmaker Henry Bean.
"Akerman links erotic crises to political ones via choreography; she sets crowds of colorfully clad customers and employees in motion as they mouth the songs’ droll, bouncy lyrics (which Akerman wrote), balanced blithely between calamity and apocalypse." - Richard Brody, The New Yorker