
It’s a treat to watch Depardieu’s Bellamy as he not so much investigates the mystery as lets it wash over him, almost as if he’s in a perpetually meditative state. And the plot is important, yes, but perhaps less so than the way the characters relate to each other, specifically Bellamy and his wife and Bellamy’s fuck-up brother, who brings a black cloud up for a visit. Their relationships bristle with joie de vivre, jealousy, denial, longing, relapse, and deep-rooted regret, sometimes all at once. Even with a few missteps—some of the point-of-view camerawork seems woefully out of place, especially given its (thankfully) minimal use, and, though the interaction between characters on the whole digs at truth, the day-to-day interactions and reactions of the major characters seems faintly at odds with the naturalistic filmmaking—it’s a beautiful film, with a conclusion that offers up an unexpected bookend that chills to the bone.