Showtimes: 6:30pm & 8:30pm
Director: Rebecca Zlotowski
Cast: Jodi Foster, Daniel Auteuil, Virginie Efira
Runtime: 107 minutes
Language: English, French with English subtitles
Five Nominations: Warsaw International Film Festival: Audience Award; Lumiere Awards, France: Best Actress (Jodi Foster); Best Soundtrack (Robin Coudert); AARP Awards: Best Actress (Jodi Foster); San Sebastian International Film Awards: Audience Award
“There’s a deliciously overripe, almost campy quality to much of “A Private Life” that’s expertly balanced by the intense focus of Foster’s performance.”—Peter Debruge, Variety
Academy Award winner Jodie Foster stars in this scintillating, slyly comic psychological thriller from French director Rebecca Zlotowski (“Other People's Children”), in which a suspicious death yields a series of twists that lead back to old grievances — and maybe even to past lives.
Lilian (Foster), an American psychoanalyst in Paris, is devastated to learn that her client Paula (Virginie Efira) has taken her own life. Or has she? Visits from Paula's furious widower Simon (Mathieu Amalric) and taciturn daughter Valérie (Luàna Bajrami), along with the discovery that files have been stolen from Lilian's office, suggest that Paula may have fallen victim to foul play.
Assisted by her ex-husband Gabriel (Daniel Auteuil), Lilian undertakes some amateur sleuthing. Her initial investigations prompt more questions than answers until a session with a hypnotherapist causes Lilian to wonder whether her relationship with Paula began in a previous incarnation.
Written by Zlotowski with Anne Berest (“Mythomaniac”) and Gaëlle Macé (“Little Jaffna”), “A Private Life” deftly rides the delicate line between intrigue and zaniness.
Perfectly paced and loaded with diverting supporting turns — including a cameo by legendary documentarian Frederick Wiseman — the film is partly a whodunnit and partly a story of revisited relationships, with a French-speaking Foster and Auteuil delivering effortlessly charismatic performances as long-time exes whose teamwork creates the film's other big mystery: why did these two ever break up?