Chéri
Media talking points for the 1920s period romance Chéri cluster around how "brave" Michelle Pfeiffer's performance is. The aging actress plays an aging whore who has a six-year relationship with a man 30 years her junior. As she seduces her young beau, Pfeiffer is drop-dead gorgeous one moment, and the next? The camera pries a little, and suddenly signs of Pfeiffer's age jump into relief: Her eyelids are crepe-y. Her neck sags. Her arm wattles quiver. Despite its ostensible bravery, Chéri is a cautionary tale--a catalogue of the ways in which women can fail. The film teems with bad mothers, frigid wives, and overripe "working girls"--here, even the temporary pleasures offered by a young lover won't prevent an aging courtesan from getting just what the world thinks she deserves.
by Alison Hallett