Ana, My Love (2017) Poster

(2017)

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7/10
The Relationship Hive Mind
tributarystu3 March 2017
Netzer's follow-up to the excellent Child's Pose (2013) shares some elements with its precursor, but takes a different angle to the emotional roots and psychological ties of family life. A complex and layered film, it is framed in the present, but plays with the chronology of events to suit its thematic anchors: how relationships shape their protagonists and create inherent tension, abiding by no morality punch- card. While pertinent and polished in its construction, I found it hard to stay connected emotionally, especially as the characters evolve elliptically and the change in their dynamic feels abrupt.

Our couple is Toma and Ana, two lovers who meet during university and, more than anything, fall into a relationship. They are both cultured individuals and complete each other well, as Ana suffers from anxiety attacks and Toma is seemingly always there to support her. The movie proceeds to take us through the usual familial meet and greets, which prove traumatic and lay the groundworks for all the ensuing/existing psychological trauma. Those scenes have a sense of caricature about them, with 'traditional' values of partner screening proving funny and harrowing at the same time. But they prove to be just pieces of an ambitious human puzzle, which ends up taking us down an exploratory route devoid of superfluous emotion.

As an aside, some people in the cinema were taken aback by the explicitness of a sex scene, which I would rather deem justified, due to the Freudian aspects of Netzer's approach - and a meaningful character- building moment.

The attention to detail in fleshing out Ana and Toma provides the characters with a lot of depth. They are, as one would say, profoundly human in their imperfections and the manner in which this comes to the surface as their relationship evolves feels very true. The movie puts psychoanalysis at its core, turning it into an indirect plot device, which sometimes looks like a black box. More important though is how Ana and Toma react to change, in particular to Ana's gradual self- empowerment (thanks to a mixture of religion and psychoanalysis), which fundamentally alters Toma's role as 'the saviour'. It all becomes a matter of identity, of shaping and losing it, as defined by relationship roles, rather than intrinsic traits. Quite interestingly, the first scene finds the protagonists discussing Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil - the subjugation of morality to Christian dogma and the idea that good and evil are not quite opposites. By the end of the film, the overwhelming sense of some moral misappropriation between Ana and Toma can and, perhaps, should be seen through this lens, with no clear distinctions at hand for who is in the right and who might have been wronged.

While all this is intense and fascinating stuff, the chronological structure creates a bridge I couldn't cross. On the one hand, the technical execution of the to and fro was handled well - it's impressive how different degrees of a receding hairline can create a sense of time. Although some nuances are lost, that ends up challenging the viewer and keeping him engaged. On the other hand, because of gaps in time, Ana is difficult to grasp. She becomes a completely different person, which goes so far as her accent changing, and due to the elliptical nature of the story, she also feels emotionally like a third character in the relationship. Whereas Toma is more consistent throughout, Ana is fractured, making her feel foreign and inauthentic.

This is part of the reason why the second half of the film lost some momentum. Upon its conclusion, which tries a little twist and then goes one mile too far by trying to explain it, I wasn't engaged any more. It's a shame, because there is so much pain and sacrifice in Ana, Mon Amour that it really makes love feel like penance and weaves an exquisite psychological pattern to justify the claim. For the exploration it undertakes in what drives the two lead characters, both so well portrayed by Postelnicu and Cavallioti, it is commendable.
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8/10
An Engrossing European Art-House Drama
paulscofield683 July 2017
Ana, Mon Amour (Anna, My Love) is a Romanian drama, inspired by a Romanian novel, Luminata, My Love. In many ways, it's a typical European art-house drama: a narrow, intense love story, very emotional scenes, jumps in time, some religious and intellectual discussions here and there, etc... The screenplay is excellent, as are the acting and direction. I liked this film much more than Child's Pose (and any recent Romanian film I've seen such as Bacalaureat or The Death of Mr. Lazarescu). It might even be better than Tuesday After Christmas. Honest and illuminating, with a damaged, melancholic streak running right through the whole film. 'Ana, mon amour' won the prestigious Silver Bear (runner up) award at the most recent Berlin Film Festival, and is highly recommended for lovers of European art-house cinema. 'Chapeau,' as we say here in France... (translation: you have my deep respect for your fine work). 8.5/10
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7/10
A melodramatic yet tender love story
euroGary13 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Despite its French title, 'Ana, Mon Amour' is set in România. It follows a young couple's love affair from first faltering steps to slow, lingering death several years later.

Ana and Toma meet at university. She has an anxiety attack during their first date (a discussion about Nietzsche) and Toma, sucker for a needy cause, is smitten. For the first several years he is the dominant partner, supporting Ana in coping with her mental issues and rescuing her when she (accidentally?) overdoses. But towards the end of their relationship, with Ana's career taking off as Toma's stalls - leaving him at home looking after the children - the tables are turned and neither is sure if their romance can survive.

The narrative hops back and forth through the years, but is relatively easy to follow (for instance, Toma's hairline provides a clever guide as to how far through the romance a particular scene occurs!) Lead actors Mircea Postelnicu and Diana Cavallioti deliver their lines in a convincingly naturalistic fashion - and while they are not wholly convincing as a couple in love, that may, given the difficulties faced by Ana and Toma, ultimately be the purpose of the film. It is well worth watching - it lasts for over two hours, but does not seem that long at all.
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7/10
LACKED IN DEPTH.
andrewchristianjr4 February 2021
The story lacked in depth but both of the actors performed well. By jumping from scene to scene in time you don't really get to know Ana and Toma and only are able to receive fragments of the truth of their relationship.
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7/10
The time jumps are somewhat confusing
steiner-sam22 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
It is set in Romania in the modern era and is a psychological drama exploring the relationship of a couple over a seven-year period. It is based on the novel "Luminita, Mon Amour" by Cezar Paul Badescu.

Toma (Mircea Postelnicu) and Ana (Diana Cavallioti) at the beginning of the film are university students in the literature program where they meet. It becomes evident that Ana suffers from panic attacks and has significant unresolved psychological problems that include her step-father and a biological father who has disappeared. Toma is passionately drawn to her and they begin an intense relationship. Neither his upper-class parents nor her lower-class parents approve of the relationship, which only attaches Toma to Ana more strongly.

As time passes Ana becomes pregnant and they both explore psychological and religious answers to what is assumed to be Ana's issues. This includes a remarkable confession scene when Toma visits the local Orthodox priest. We see Toma's encounters with his psychoanalyst and know that Ana is also visiting a psychoanalyst, but the perspective is from Toma's view. After about three years they are married and their son, Tudor, is growing. Toma is still the breadwinner and Ana remains mostly at home. We begin to note that Toma has control issues.

As their son, Tudor becomes a bit older, Ana has become more confident and independent. Toma has walked away from his job as a newspaper journalist, and Ana has found her own well-paying position as an editor. Toma becomes more controlling and paranoid leading to the collapse of their relationship.

This was a very good, albeit intense, film in my mind. It got somewhat mixed reviews, especially compared to the director's first film. It was a bit hard to track the timing of some scenes--the only way to track it is to see how Toma's hairline changes from student to journalist to a man with thinning hair talking to his analyst. The time jumps are somewhat confusing.

The movie includes significant nudity including a difficult scene when Ana has overdosed on her medication.
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4/10
Repetitiva, mal montada y demasiado sexual. Repetitive, badly mounted and too sexual
Andres-Camara13 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
La verdad es que a mí la película, en el momento en el que empieza a ir de un lado para otro temporal, me empezó a cansar. Al principio es interesante, sí. Pero luego entre el sexo explícito, que no hace ninguna falta y que todo el rato es lo mismo, me da pereza. Luego por supuesto, ideología de género a tope.

Los actores están bien si, no fenomenales pero bien.

La iluminación es nefasta, como suele ser en ese cine.

La dirección, no se da cuenta de que cansa tanto vaivén temporal. Los planos son demasiado cerrados. Es demasiado larga.

Podría haber sido una película dura, pero el director la ha lastrado.

The truth is that the film, at the moment when it starts to go from one place to another temporary, began to tire me. At the beginning it's interesting, yes. But then between explicit sex, which does not need any and that all the time is the same, I'm lazy. Then, of course, gender ideology to the fullest.

The actors are fine yes, not great but good.

The lighting is disastrous, as it usually is in that cinema.

The management does not realize that it is so tiring so temporarily. The plans are too closed. It is too long

It could have been a hard movie, but the director has ballasted it
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