Academy Award winner Juliette Binoche at her best
Isabelle, Parisian artist, divorced mother, is looking for love, true love at last. Academy Award winner Juliette Binoche is luminous in the new film from acclaimed French filmmaker Claire Denis (Beau Travail, White Material).
Loosely based on Roland Barthes's A Lovers Discourse, and an award winner at Cannes Directors' Fortnight, Let the Sunshine In is a sophisticated romantic comedy examining female companionship and sexual desire. Juliette Binoche is Isabelle, a Parisian artist and middle-aged divorcée moving from relationship to relationship: from her ex-husband for whom she still has affection; the banker who bosses her around; and the handsome actor who has an inability to make a decision. Hungry for love but afraid of never having a meaningful relationship with a man again, Isabelle grapples with the keys to fulfillment.
Joined by an illustrious cast, including Josiane Balasko, Gerard Depardieu, Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, and Nicolas Duvauchelle, Binoche is radiant as a woman yearning to find happiness at a time when it feels like a rare commodity.
Critics Reviews for Let The Sunshine In (Un Beau Soleil Intérieur):
- “It's a pleasure to go along with that ride – to watch Binoche's face lighting up like a flower suddenly blooming, to enjoy Denis' golden light and moody, nostalgic score.” – Moira MacDonald, Seattle Times
- “There's a Hollywood version of this tale, but that's not the one co-writer and director Claire Denis presents. "Let the Sunshine In” works because it's real, relatable and true to the heart." – Adam Graham, Detroit News
- “Denis's foray into the often-goofy world of the rom-com is at once a cold bath of realism and a bewitching portrait of the power of love.” – David Sims, The Atlantic