Cold as Summer (TV Movie 2002) Poster

(2002 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
10/10
Difficult to believe this was made for TV
CIMC2 November 2005
The most chilling aspect of any villain is his or her normalcy. The more aberrant the behavior, the easier it is to dismiss their villainy. Normal folks doing bad things though is a bit more unsettling. We see their ordinariness reflected in the mirror. One such antihero is Rachel (Sarah Grappin) in Jacques Maillot's superb Cold as Summer.

Rachel is a single mother raising a child she doesn't really have the temperament for. She gets Rohypnol from her doctor not only to help her sleep, but to keep the baby from crying at night as well. In any scene where she's with the kid it's clear that she has absolutely no idea what to do in any given situation. Her life is not where she wants it to be but she doesn't know or cannot do what it takes to properly get someplace else. She finds an alternative route that has consequences beyond anything she intended.

Rachel is contrasted with Claire (Nathalie Richard). She's a cop struggling with child issues of her own. Events take her towards Rachel, a woman she is appalled by even as she grows more sympathetic. Both Richard and Grappin put in excellent performances. Maillot and Pierre Chosson's script manages to move the story towards a level of sympathy one wouldn't think to feel for Rachel but it's Grappin's accomplishment that it works so well. One can't help but hope she succeeds while reviling her at the same time.

So much of the effectiveness of this film is predicated on not knowing much about the story line. Suffice to say, it is an excellent movie. All too often made-for-TV films are artistic toilets overflowing with cinematic waste. Cold as Summer is a plunger that makes all that nastiness head down the drain leaving only pristine porcelain perfection to contemplate. OK, the metaphor sucks but you get the point.
16 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great character film
Pheutakyl-7777 October 2003
Warning: Spoilers
I came across this on Arte TV during a week in Paris and I'm so glad I did. Sarah Grappin is enrapturing as Rachel, a young twenty-something who leaves her daughter behind--leaving a note with neighbors--to go and "find herself" at the seashore. A lady cop finds the baby days later (the neighbors had gone out of town) and begins a search for Rachel.

My grasp of French is minimal but many scenes were nearly silent, requiring Grappin to get her character across with looks and simple quiet. Nathalie Richard is also wonderful as the investigator, who has her own layers as she and her husband have had difficulty having children, but this is truly Grappin's film.

I look forward to being able to watch this again, as it is only now getting festival view in the States. Hopefully, people will realize what a wonderful film Jacques Maillot has made and allow a DVD release here is the good old "Etats Unis."
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed