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¿"My
life without me" is "Love Story" with attitude.
Sarah Polley -who turns in one oh those performances that
shift an acting career into a higher gear- even looks a little
bit like Ali Mc Graw. But while audiences should go armed
with a supply of handkerchiefs, this Spanish-Canadian co-production
by "Things I Never Told You" director Isabel Coixet,
which tells the story of a 24 year-old-woman who is dying
of cancer, is more muscular than mawkish. Executive produced
by Pedro Almodovar, it is a very much intelligent melodrama
genre of the Spanish master's last two films. And "My
life without me" is certainly hot: just before Berlinale
competition screening, following sales to a number of territories
including Japan and Scandinavia, the film was snapped up by
Sony Pictures Classics for the US and Tobis for Germany; other
deals are certain to follow. And in Polley -who holds back
as much as she lets out- Sony Pictures Classics have got themselves
a strong early contender for the 2004 Oscars.
Though
few commercially-viable films have dwelt so insistently on
death, "My life without me" is by no means depressing.
The old adage about tragedy being life-enhancing holds true
not only for the audience, but for the main character as well.
Ann is a fairly ordinary 24-year-old Canadian woman with two
small daughter and a loving husband. Though they live in a
mobile home in her mother's backyard, there is nothing dysfunctional
about this family unit (the same cannot be said for the mother
-a washed up blonde played by Deborah Harry with just the
right amount of bitter cynicism). One day, Ann falls prey
to that old Hollywood stand-by: doctor diagnose a tumour,
and give her only has a couple of months to live. She decides
to conceal the truth from her family for as long as she can,
and spend the time that remains preparing them for life without
her by finding her husband a new wife, and by making tapes
for her daughters' birthdays, one a year until they are 18.
A mother at 17, and married to the only man she has ever kissed,
Ann also decides to take a lover before she shuffles off.
It sounds
like a recipe for an over-the-top weepie; but the director
creates a series of schmaltz-barriers. The film ends early,
rather than following Ann through to the end. The lover (an
intense, poetic introvert played by Mark Ruffalo, who chooses
his roles well) is a good touch: it makes Ann less of a saint.
And Jean Claude Larrieu's photography has a nicely rough,
honest edge: it is made up of extreme close-ups, off centre
framing and plenty of driving Vancouver rain, although there
is one oddly amateurish day-for-night sequence. Sound recording
follows the same line: miked for realism to include background
hiss and clatter, the dialogue comes across a little muddy
at times. Unlike the music -a mix of elegiac modern-classics
strings and vintage torch songs (including Italian and Spanish
classics, and the Beach Boys sung by a school choir) -which
provides a lucid accompaniment to the emotional squeeze.
The only
real weak point are two minor characters: Ann's diet-obsessed
cleaner colleague (Plummer) adds little depth to the endeavour,
while Maria de Medeiro's braided disco-dancing hairdresser
is entirely irrelevant. But it's Ann that the script, and
the camera, and the audience, keep returning to 
LEE
MARSHALL
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