Madame Jean
Sophie Bruneau, Marc-Antoine Roudil
2011 - 73 min - Beta digital / HDCam - Couleur - France, Belgique

Two women from different generations are talking around a table in an old farm in the Cantal, filmed by a hand-held camera that seems to breathe in time with them. In the room, the shifting light and car noises remind us of an off-camera farming world in perpetual change. Marie-Hélène Lafon is visiting Madame Jean and asking her about her past. They share a farming childhood, a language tinged with regional expressions, recipes from Madame Jean’s notebook, which her visitor has already tasted here. As a writer who recreates in her novels the old woman’s turn-of-century world of childhood, might this visitor have come to rekindle her memories ? When Madame Jean mentions “Jacques the Box”, the blind hawker, or her great-uncles of “class 14”, all killed in the war, she includes in a touching “we” ancestors that she knows only by hearsay. As the apples are peeled and, in the narration, as the acreage of the farm belonging to Madame Jean’s parents increases through the purchases of neighbouring plots, the relationship between Marie-Hélène and Madame Jean’s mother creates a slight blur.
(Charlotte Garson, Cinéma du réel 2011)



Author-Director : Sophie Bruneau, Marc-Antoine Roudil
Photography : Benoît Dervaux
Sound : Marc-Antoine Roudil
Editing : Philippe Boucq
Delegate Producer : ADR Productions

Distribution


Distributor : ADR Productions

Distinctions

2011 - Cinéma du réel, Paris (France) : Compétition Contrechamp français