 
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Catherine Breillat
  Starring: Léa Drucker, Samuel Kircher, Olivier Rabourdin, Clotilde Courau
 
    
      While American remakes of European films are common, it's much rarer to
        find European remakes of films from other countries of the continent.
        This is probably largely down to the simple fact that while most
        Americans are averse to subtitles, Europeans are well accustomed to
        watching movies in languages other than their own. For a viewer in
        Spain, watching an American movie is no different to watching one from
        Belgium. There's also the idea that western Europe shares a cultural
        outlook that is largely homogenous at this point. There are however
        subtle differences between European nations which might seem to share a
        similar cultural point of view, largely holdovers from the continent's
        religious past.
    
      Such subtle variations can be noted between the Danish film
        Queen of Hearts
        and Last Summer, its new French remake by director Catherine Breillat. Both
        movies are about a middle-aged woman who embarks on a sexual affair with
        her 17-year-old teenage stepson. Were this story to play out in America,
        the boy would be underage and it would be a narrative of sexual abuse.
        In both France and Denmark the act is legal, so it's instead a narrative
        of wrestling with a moral taboo. Yet while the Danish and French movies
        share almost identical plots, the Protestant doubt of the former is here
        traded for Catholic guilt.

      The role previously played so brilliantly by Trine Dyrholm is now
        occupied by Leá Drucker. Her Anne is a successful lawyer who
        specialises in cases of sexual assault. The film opens with her coldly
        preparing a client for the gruelling cross-examinations she is set to
        receive if she takes her accusations to trial. Anne warns her young
        client that the defence will do everything they can to make her look
        like a sexually promiscuous teen given to flights of fancy. It's a scene
        that will later prove highly ironic.
    
      Fortysomething Anne is in a stable but dull relationship with her
        slightly older husband Pierre (Olivier Rabourdin), who has one of
        those ambiguous "something to do with money" jobs French films always
        seem to foist on middle-aged, middle class figures they wish to
        represent the boring bourgeoisie (the corresponding character in the
        more nuanced Danish original was a doctor). Anne, who always seems to
        have a glass of red in her hand, gives the impression of a bird Pierre
        managed to long ago cage. While making missionary love, Anne recounts
        the story of how as a 14-year-old she had a crush on an "old man." She
        now finds it amusing that the "old man" in question was a mere 33 years
        old at the time.

      It almost seems as though Anne is mentally preparing and excusing
        herself for the transgression she's set to commit. That comes when Theo
        (Samuel Kircher), Pierre's tearaway son from a previous marriage,
        comes to stay with the couple for the summer. He's a proper wrong 'un,
        faking a break-in and stealing Anne's handbag and its contents. When
        Anne catches him out, she makes a pact – if Theo stops acting like an
        asshole to his father she won't rat him out.
    
      This act on Anne's part seems to light a spark in Theo. If she's
        willing to keep a secret of this magnitude from her hubby, what else
        might she be willing to keep between herself and Theo? Thus Theo begins
        a campaign of aggressive flirting until eventually Anne gives in and the
        pair end up in bed while Pierre is away on a business trip. In a moment
        of post-coital clarity, Anne suggests they pretend the incident never
        happened, but she can't help but give in to Theo's demands. When she
        later tries to end things permanently, Theo reveals a darker side,
        putting both Anne's career and marriage in jeopardy.

      Last Summer differs from its predecessor chiefly in its
        portrayal of Anne's motivations. In the original she's the one who
        pursues the teen and is ultimately the seducer, whereas here this
        dynamic is flipped. There are certainly hints that Anne might be up for
        some transgressive fumblings but unlike her Danish counterpart, she
        holds back. There's also a key difference between how the two female
        protagonists are mentally tormented. In the case of Danish Anne, she was
        struck by doubt. We saw her examining the folds of flesh on her
        middle-aged body, and listening with a pained expression as her young
        lover made out with girls of his own generation in the next room. French
        Anne has no such doubts. Drucker might be 50 but she boasts an athletic
        figure most 20-year-olds would kill for. When Theo parades a lithe young
        girl in front of her, she merely smirks. Breillat has opted for a story
        of a woman who is always in control, whether it be professionally or in
        her marriage (we see how she knowingly uses her "trophy wife" status to
        wrap Pierre around her little finger), who now finds herself in danger
        of having to give in to the manipulations of someone as equally
        practiced in her dark acts. Both approaches are interesting in their own
        right, though the Danish version will likely prove the more relatable
        for female viewers of Anne's vintage.
    
     
       
