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Six of the Best: Marion Cotillard

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Little White Lies

Little White Lies

Teaming up once again with frequent collaborator and long-term partner Guillaume Canet, the Parisian actress excels in this quaint and personal drama. 2010’s Little White Lies links a series of events which entail love, loss and most importantly life, and in the process feels like a work of the aforementioned Woody Allen.

Dialogue-driven and dressed by relentlessly beautiful cinematography, Cotillard thrives in the waves of emotion, yet remains poised and delicate in the picture’s tender, more humorous moments. She absolutely excels as Marie; a pot-smoking and rebellious woman who like the remainder of those involved, is keen to enjoy her summer holiday despite friend Ludo (Jean Dujardin) currently fighting for his life in hospital after a horrific road traffic collision.

Plus the burden of a messy relationship rests upon her shoulders which only causes further friction. Essentially Canet paints a portrait of the broken-spirited; these are complicated, at times selfish people, yet he renders them all with hope and heart making this an extremely pleasing picture.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Your article is amazingly great! I love all these performances by Marion, I could only replace Midnight in Paris for Nine. I’m a very big fan of Marion and I hope she will get an Oscar nomination for her magnificent performance in Two Days, One Night.

    @pedropinheiroo

  2. A terrific article indeed. Marion Cotillard is simply beyond amazing as an actress. Mere words cannot do justice to her groundbreaking talent. Frankly, I really think it’s absurd to live in a world where Marion
    Cotillard has only one nomination (and a much deserved win, of couse, in
    fact the most deserving in the history of Academy Awards). I mean,
    really how can this even be possible? Seriously, let’s face it, Marion Cotillard
    is THE GREATEST ACTRESS OF ALL TIME. That’s right, this is by no means an exaggeration. I’m a movies lover by birth, I’ve watched thousands of movies and I’ve worked as both a film critic and a screenwriter but I’ve never, literally NEVER saw an actor or actress with Cotillard’s skills. And I highly doubt I’ll ever see. In the history of time, there has
    never been an actor or an actress that can reach her otherwordly talent in acting, her unmatched
    technical skills, her obviously limitless depth, her level of commitment
    to every role she so brilliantly portrays on screen or on stage and her
    constant desire to take risks. Marion Cotillard is the definition of
    acting, something like the incarnation of the word itself, she tops
    every person in the history of mankind, male or female (from Daniel
    Day-Lewis and Philip Seymour Hoffman to Katharine Hepburn and Meryl
    Streep) who ever attempted to become an actor. With every performance
    she gives, she redefines the term of acting, it’s as if she pushes
    acting to a whole another level. From the legendary Edith Piaf of “La
    vie en rose” and the mdisturbed Mal of “Inception” to the long-suffering
    wife of Day-Lewis’ Guido in “Nine” and the emotionally shattered
    amuptee from “Rust and bone”, Marion Cotillard has dedicated herself to
    her craft in a way no actor/actress can ever claim he/she ever did.
    She’s criminally ignored from the Academy since winning her first Oscar
    back in 2008 for giving the best female performance ever in “La vie en
    rose”. How can she have only one Oscar nomination and win? I mean, it
    makes no sense at all. It’s not only a shame that she has never been
    nominated since 2008, it’s inconceivable. How on Earth she hasn’t even
    been nominated for “Nine”, but Sandra Bullock ended up winning for “The
    Blind Side”? After watching her being snubbed so relentlessly for her
    more than worthy of an Oscar win work in the last few years, I don’t
    even want to imagine of her being snubbed again in 2015, with two PHENOMENAL performances praised so highly as the ones she gave in “The Immigrant”
    and Dardennes’ latest “Two Days, One Night”. Just give her a second Oscar already, there’s not an actress whose work could possibly come close to those acting masterpieces. I really don’t care at all about which will be the film that will earn her a second Oscar, I just wish from the bottom of my heart I could watch her again on stage grabbing a much, much, much DESERVED second Oscar. This is hers. It’s her Oscar in the 2015 ceremony, if not, this will be the biggest injustice in the history of the Academy Awards. EVER.

  3. This is an amazing article! I love Marion’s performances in those movies and can’t wait to see her in ‘Two Days, One Night’!
    I agree with @pedroasp3, Cotillard’s performance in Nine should have been mentioned!

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