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Asia Argento and Fu'ad Aït Aattou star in the French romantic drama The Last Mistress, showing Sept. 15 and 16 at Aspens Wheeler Opera House.
In The Last Mistress, a passionate and explicit film about sexual obsession, everything pauses for a scene depicting a marriage. It is 1835, in a church in Paris. Vows are exchanged between Ryno de Marigny, a notorious young libertine, and the high-born Hermangarde, whose wealth will be a great comfort to the penniless Ryno. The film opens with two gossipy old friends wondering why the Marquise de Flers would sacrifice her beloved granddaughter to this rake.
I wondered why time was devoted to the ceremony, in a film where Hermangarde speaks scarcely 100 words and the great passion is between Ryno and his mistress of 10 years, the disreputable Vellini. Then I realized it was an excuse to work in the Biblical readings (requested by the bride and groom surely a modern touch?). The Gospel contains Gods strictures about man and wife, divorce and adultery, letting no man put asunder, etc. The epistle is Paul to the Corinthians, venting his admonishments to women, who must always take second place, cover their heads in the sight of the Lord, obey their masters, and so on.
These readings enter the film precisely to be contradicted by Vellini (Asia Argento) in every atom of her being. Born out of wedlock to an Italian princess and a Spanish matador, she is technically wed to an English aristocrat, but in fact is the most impetuous courtesan in Paris. When she overhears young Ryno (Fuad Ait Aattou) describe her as a mutt, she permits herself the smallest smile before taking another lick of her ice cream (shaped like what we now call a torpedo).
The Last Mistress is the latest film from the French director Catherine Breillat, famous for the explicit eroticism of such films as Fat Girl and Romance. Here she makes an elegant period piece, with all the costumes, carriages, servants, chateaus and mannered behavior we would expect, and then explodes its decorum with a fiery performance by Argento. Does she love her young prize, with his lips full as a womans? Does he love her, with her two front teeth tilted inward like a vampires? Love has nothing to do with it. They are in the grip of erotomania.
I wondered why time was devoted to the ceremony, in a film where Hermangarde speaks scarcely 100 words and the great passion is between Ryno and his mistress of 10 years, the disreputable Vellini. Then I realized it was an excuse to work in the Biblical readings (requested by the bride and groom surely a modern touch?). The Gospel contains Gods strictures about man and wife, divorce and adultery, letting no man put asunder, etc. The epistle is Paul to the Corinthians, venting his admonishments to women, who must always take second place, cover their heads in the sight of the Lord, obey their masters, and so on.
These readings enter the film precisely to be contradicted by Vellini (Asia Argento) in every atom of her being. Born out of wedlock to an Italian princess and a Spanish matador, she is technically wed to an English aristocrat, but in fact is the most impetuous courtesan in Paris. When she overhears young Ryno (Fuad Ait Aattou) describe her as a mutt, she permits herself the smallest smile before taking another lick of her ice cream (shaped like what we now call a torpedo).
The Last Mistress is the latest film from the French director Catherine Breillat, famous for the explicit eroticism of such films as Fat Girl and Romance. Here she makes an elegant period piece, with all the costumes, carriages, servants, chateaus and mannered behavior we would expect, and then explodes its decorum with a fiery performance by Argento. Does she love her young prize, with his lips full as a womans? Does he love her, with her two front teeth tilted inward like a vampires? Love has nothing to do with it. They are in the grip of erotomania.
“The Last Mistress” will show at Aspen’s Wheeler Opera House in Aspen on Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 15-16. IFC Films presents a film written and directed by Catherine Breillat, based on the novel by Jules Barbey d’Aurevilly. In French, with English subtitles. Running time: 114 minutes. No MPAA rating (intended for mature audiences). Rated: Three and a half stars.


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