Where & When: TIFF: Visa Screening Room at Princess of Wales Theatre, Toronto, Ontario Canada September 10, 2024 11:30 AM
Available to stream now on Netflix
The French filmmaker, Jacques Audiard began his career as a screenwriter, co-writing over ten feature films before moving behind the camera. His first feature, "Regarde les hommes tomber (See How They Fall)" in 1993 was well-received, earning the director three César Awards (France's Oscars) including for Best First Work. Audiard's subsequent features are bold and daring works that would go on to be critically acclaimed internationally and award-winning with him collecting eleven César Awards to date and winning the top prize of the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 2015. While most of his films would be contemporary and set in his native country, Audiard would recently become a cinematic world traveler, creating works further outside from his own experiences. First, there was "Dheepan" (which won the Palme d'Or) involving a Sri Lankan soldier during the country's civil war who creates a new identity in order to securely achieve political asylum in France. Then he ventured to America with his first English-language film, "The Sisters Brothers", a nineteenth century western about assassin-for-hire brothers in search of gold.
With his latest, "Emilia Pérez" (a Jury Prize winner at this year's Cannes), a story set in Mexico about a male drug-dealer who transitions into a female, Audiard continues to goes further into transcending our expectations of cinematic storytelling. An unconventional yet riveting melodrama that catches you by surprise, managing to be equally captivating and disturbing.
Our story begins with Rita Castro (Zoe Saldaña), a defense attorney in the middle of a murder trial uncomfortably defending someone she knows is guilty. After winning the case, she is approached with a mysterious proposition by an anonymous client. The client turns out to be Juan Del Monte, a notorious cartel kingpin known as "Manitas" (Karla Sofía Gascón) who wants her help arranging for him to have surgery to change his gender. Learning about his years of struggling with his gender identity, Rita agrees to this strange yet lucrative offer. After finding the right doctors to discreetly perform the operation, her final task is to move Del Monte's wife, Jessi (Selena Gomez) with their two children to Switzerland for their safety before she learns that her husband has "died".
A few years later, Rita runs into a woman at a dinner party in London who is also from Mexico. It is "Manitas" who has been reborn as "Emilia Pérez" (also played by Gascón) and is insisting on Rita's help once again. Desperately missing her family, Emilia wants Rita to bring Jessi back to Mexico City under the guise that she is her husband's distant cousin wanting to help her raise the children. Skeptical yet wanting to return to Mexico, Jessi agrees to this plan.
While happy to be reunited with her family, Emilia is confronted by her criminal past and that guilt leads to her beginning a non-profit to help identify the bodies of cartel victims, some she may have been directly responsible for their murders. One woman, Epifanía (Adriana Paz) is contacted by Emilia when the remains of her missing husband have been identified. But she's shocked when Epifanía is simply relieved that her abusive husband is actually dead. They begin a friendship which surprisingly turns romantic.
Did I mention that "Emilia Pérez" is also a musical? Audiard unexpectedly uses song (French composer, Clément Ducol and pop musician, Camille Dalmais co-wrote the music) and dance (Damien Jalet choreographed) to heighten the already compelling dramatic narrative. But unlike the recent comic-book sequel, "Joker: Folie à Deux" which added musical numbers to the dark drama that came across as a labored effect, the original songs here perfectly captures each character's anguished fears, secret pain and burning desires.
The Spanish-born Gascón came out as trans in 2018 after performing as an actor for many years in Mexico as Juan Carlos Gascón. Capturing the shrewd menace of "Manitas" while revealing a somewhat softer antagonist as Emilia, the actress convinces in this dual role, commanding the screen with a mesmerizing presence. It would seem she has used some of her own personal experiences into her performance, sharing with her character the challenges of transitioning in order to live authentically.
The veteran Saldaña, who has made her name with her Hollywood work in the sc-fi franchise films, "Avatar", "Star Trek" and "Guardians of the Galaxy", has an opportunity to reveal another side of herself as a performer. Starting off her career wanting to do ballet, she had to abandon this dream by not having the feet for this highly technical form of dance. But Saldaña would make her film debut as a ballet student in "Center Stage" back in 2000. She dazzles here, singing and dancing as a lawyer caught in a moral compromise between wanting to help make a better society and defending the criminal element.
Gomez might be better known as a pop singer but she began as a child actress finding fame on the Disney Channel and more recently has impressed with her comedic turn in the series, "Only Murder in the Building". Playing against type, Gomez is completely convincing as the pampered, bleach-blond mob wife who's grasping at whatever she can in order to survive. Along with Paz, these diverse actresses also shared a well-deserved prize for Best Actress at this year's Cannes Film Festival, working together seamlessly.
When Jessi starts up an affair with Gustavo (Édgar Ramírez), she wants to marry him and move away with the children. An enraged Emilia refuses to allow her to take them, leading to a violently explosive, bombastic finale. Operatic at it's core, "Emilia Pérez" is a visually striking fantasia rooted in a realistic milieu. The mix of genres may not always mesh together perfectly throughout the film but Audiard has been a cinematic craftsman who desires to provoke and challenge, completely uninterested in easy convention. Wildly audacious and thrillingly entertaining, "Emilia Pérez" is absolutely one of my favorite films I've seen this year.
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