No, what Anne is really questioning is her role as a wife and homemaker, which comes to a head as she prepares a dinner party for her husband’s boss. This is something she has likely done many times before, but suddenly the whole concept becomes anathema to her (much to her husband’s chagrin). Why is it so important that she doll herself up and play the perfect little hostess, anyway? Just to “please” her husband? What am I, his whore? Oh, the humanity! Cue the meltdown. When the film makes this sudden and awkward shift into
Diary of a Mad Housewife territory, it loses credibility. Are we really supposed to believe that all it takes is several interviews with a couple of student hookers for this woman, who has a great career, loving family and a fabulous Parisian apartment, to suddenly determine that all men suck and that her life is total shit? I’m just not buying it.
That being said, when you’ve got Binoche on board (one of the finest actresses currently strolling the planet), you can almost forgive the film’s weak script and narrative flaws. Frankly, she is the sole reason to watch it (if you’re looking for a reason). Binoche can hold your attention by simply staring out of a sunlit window (there’s a lot of that). If not for her presence, I would have summed up the film thusly: Eat Pray Love with an NC-17.
Previous posts with related themes:
.