'Frankie': Film Review | Cannes 2019 hollywoodreporter.com/review/frankie-review-cannes-2019-1212362
Cannes Film Festival
Isabelle Huppert stars as an actress who gathers her extended family in an idyllic spot for a summer vacation she knows will be their last together in Ira Sachs' latest drama. Shifting from the New York settings of Keep the Lights On, Love Is Strange and Little Men to one of the most beautiful corners of Europe, director Ira Sachs offers many gentle pleasures in his latest film, Frankie, not least of them the gorgeous locations in the verdant Portuguese mountain landscape of Sintra. Alongside the magnetic Isabelle Huppert in a role that draws with equal grace from her well of dry humor, flinty intelligence, diva hauteur and internalized sorrow, there are affecting moments to savor also from Brendan Gleeson and Marisa Tomei in a solid ensemble cast. If the sedate, gossamer-thin drama about family and marriage, love and loss lacks the emotional complexity and intense personal investment of Sachs' best work, its classy oldschool art house veneer should help Sony Pictures Classics find an audience for the fall release. That said, this is definitely a second-tier entry from the director, and an odd choice for his debut in the Cannes competition, with the French launch platform amplifying its hint of Rohmer-lite. 1/4