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Marion Cotillard is Sandra, a married woman with two children who plans to return to her factory job after a breakdown. Upon returning to work, she's told that she is to be made redundant while her co-workers will receive a bonus. Sandra's best friend at work has convinced their boss to hold another vote after the weekend: do the workers want to save Sandra's job, or keep their bonus? Sandra has two days and one night to convince them. (SBS)

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Othello 

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English The problem starts with the source material, based on the fact that the Docent of Evil at the head of this blah blah company, while scratching a Persian cat with a necklace, thought he'd fundamentally mess with his employees' weekend laziness by assigning them ethics and morality homework for Monday. Either they kick the ass of the incompetent Marion Cotillard, whose psychiatrist is, in my opinion, not exactly in the right place, or they get to keep their sizable annual salary bonus. That might at least add some balls to the next teambuilding. This starting point isn't that bad a priori, but it doesn't match the cancerously earnest treatment (btw, except for the last two points, Dogma cut and dried) without an ounce of perspective, which proves once and for all that a faithful portrayal of depression is not a cinematically attractive discipline, no matter how much Cotillard beats herself to death on camera. It's not subversive, it's not innovative, it's not remotely entertaining, and it's not viable in what it tries to convey. I appreciate the resignation to formal aesthetics, where the steaminess of a poor-quality summer weekend is enhanced by individual scenes set in hideous satellite suburbs, gas stations, apartment complexes, and McMansions, but that's what we’ve got Ulrich Seidl for. ()

kaylin 

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English A film about the challenges people may also face at work. The French know that Marion Cotillard is a national treasure, and they give her roles where she can absolutely shine. She does that here. Simply a woman with depression who they cunningly want to get rid of. It’s well-made, but I somehow expected it to hit me harder. ()

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gudaulin 

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English I have great respect for the social dramas of the Dardenne brothers, but there has always been something missing or excessive for me in their films. Yet this drama, set in a corporate environment, resonated with me so much that I accepted it without reservations and with enthusiasm. For me, this is the most crucial film by the sibling duo. The seemingly artificially created situation corresponds to the conflicts that unions and management resolve in collective bargaining in companies when they have to decide between preserving jobs or increasing wages. One of the world's best actresses in the lead role is just the icing on the cake. Overall impression: 90%. ()

POMO 

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English “Why is she so worried about her situation when she could just get a new job,” we keep wondering in relation to the protagonist’s overdramatic behavior. And then we understand that rather than trying to keep her job, she wanted to… And the film becomes a valuable sociological study of the difficult life of one particular mortal woman. Marion Cotillard is brilliant in this. ()

NinadeL 

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English Belgian social realism? Not interested. I haven't seen anything as manipulative as this in a long time. Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne didn't even notice in their quest for an experience that an attempted suicide cannot be dismissed with a single stomach pump and have that chapter closed. It's a fake, naive, and dare I say, stupid film. It pretends to arouse interest and emotions, and festival audiences are thrilled, some simply because they believe that the truth lies in Marion Cotillard (in the absurd logic that an actress who portrays a well-groomed character is not truthful and vice versa). ()

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