Hidden Love (2007) Poster

(2007)

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2/10
Top Drawer Elements Don't Add Up
sjanders-8643020 September 2020
The Hidden Love actors are the best. The music works well. The black and color are wondetful. Yet great parts don't equal a great whole. Because this story is about a woman who has made three suicide attempts and then is mute there is no genius who could make her despair tangible viewing. The book must have the inside scoop on all the unanswered questions. I might read it.
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7/10
Devastating psycho-drama on motherhood
yris200227 October 2009
It is impossible not to be shocked by this movie, focused on a very delicate theme, and on three female characters. An over the top (and very courageous) Isabelle Huppert plays the main role of Danielle, a mother who hates her daughter in a visceral way, and has spent her whole life between indifference and sense of guilt, but incapable of elaborating her suffering condition. Her interpretation is devastating, her face is completely blank and the camera focused on it underlines the void of her inner world, still more underlined by the aseptic, white, impersonal environment surrounding her. Her troubled relationship with motherhood is probably part of a mental disorder, since also the relation with her good husband has always been difficult, as she has often felt disgusted by him, and she feels in general incapable of experiencing any human feelings. Mélanie Laurent plays Sophie, the hated daughter, she shifts from total inexpressiveness when she is with Danielle (although she feels some kind of love for her), to tender maternal love when she is with her own daughter. Greta Scacchi plays the analyst and is the only soothing and positive human female figure, trying to elaborate some sense and to assert the value of human sympathy.

The atmosphere throughout the movie never ceases to be tense, sometimes too tense, the moments of "dialogue" between Danielle and Sophie convey such anger, rage, hate that they are almost unbearable. The final outcome tries to offer some relief, although not too convincing, as if a backwards step seemed to be necessary in order to bring all the hate we have perceived to a more humanly-acceptable dimension, as if some kind of rescue were to be found, but it seems too a hasty ending, which leaves many unsolved, but probably unsolvable questions (above all, the only hinted reference by Danielle to the possibility that every mother could have negative feelings for a child, that you cannot enforce yourself to love someone, not even your own child). Undoubtedly, a very well interpreted movie, but, obviously, very sad and depressing, you need to be prepared and be in the right mood to see it.
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8/10
Relentlessly dark puzzle
hof-411 August 2020
Danielle, a woman in her late forties has been institutionalized by her daughter Sophie after three suicide attempts. We see Danielle in therapy sessions with Dr. Nielsen, who is supportive and caring but seems to be at the end of her tether; she has Danielle put her thoughts in writing with the hope of finding a crack past her impregnable shell. As the action progresses we learn that for many years (perhaps always) Danielle has been unable to form "normal" attachments with other human beings including her husband and daughter; her interactions are devoid of love or even of a hint of empathy or tolerance and are sometimes tinged with plain hatred. We are given no clue about the causes, childhood traumas or family situations that may have shaped her. We don't even know if she can be entirely believed; according to her daughter, Danielle is a narcissist given to playacting and manipulation.

The ending is perhaps the most enigmatic part of the film. We can connect the dots in various ways. Some offer a ray of hope, but others end the story in the very heart of darkness.

Isabelle Huppert, playing Danielle is a fearless actress. Her skills range all over the spectrum and she can be charming and charismatic if needed. However, her trademark has been portraying characters in various stages of mental and psychological disturbance. Huppert's creation of her personage in this movie is made of obsessive hand gestures, long silences and stares that are sometimes blank and void, other times all-knowing. Her performance is flawless and the rest of the actors also acquit themselves with distinction. Production values, among them music and cinematography are first rate.

All in all, this is a strangely compelling film. It's sometimes hard to watch due to the subject matter but engages the viewer's attention from beginning to end. Not to miss.
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10/10
An Avant Garde Portrayal Of Feminist Maternal Anxieties
JoeKulik26 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Alessandro Capone's Hidden Love (2010) is a very well executed, and thought provoking film, with great acting by the whole cast, and especially by Huppert. But as a film fanatic with a BA/MA in Psychology, I just can't buy this film as an expression Of Cinematic Realism in any way, because the storyline just doesn't portray severe mental illness, life in a mental hospital, or the behavior of a professional psychiatrist in very realistic terms.

Examples: 1) The type of severe psychosis exhibited by Danielle just doesn't "magically" disappear like it did at the end of this film, even given a "life changing" event, like the sudden death of Danielle's daughter. 2) A mental hospital would have a psychotic patient like Danielle in a monitored "locked ward", and not roaming free having violent episodes in the hallway, and having access to pills in the way that this film portrays Danielle. 3) The portrayal of the "sympathetic" Dr Nielsen getting so emotionally involved with the psychotic Danielle is unreal, because you learn in Psych 101 that a therapist who becomes emotionally involved with a patient loses his therapeutic effectiveness. From a Realist perspective, this is just a psychiatric film from outer space.

However, this film does work very well for me as an Avant Garde portrayal of feminist maternal anxiety.

A feminist interpretation of this film works because ALL the main characters are women, and also because it passes the Bechdel Test many multiple times ad nauseam.

The Avant Garde angle works because of the elements of radical cinematography, a couple of weird symbolic scenes toward the end of the film showing Danielle with her now dead daughter, and some elements of radical editing in the film.

This in no way means that I would necessarily buy into the message of such an Avant Garde feminist interpretation of this film, but I would accept as being within the scope of the creative freedom of the filmmaker.

Isabelle Huppert gives a fantastic, believable, and somewhat technically accurate portrayal of a psychotic woman. However, having already viewed a number of Huppert's films, I would say that she seems to be attracted to roles that portray somewhat deranged women, in general.

This film definitely did give me much reason for pause and reflection. It is a very well thought out, and provocative film.
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