Another choice lifted from Kael's When the Lights Go Down , this French film has been alternately labeled a 'folk opera' or a feminist musical. Musically it's pretty forgettable -- one of the two lead characters, Pomme (Apple, played by Valerie Mairesse) is a singer of dubious renown, despite nearer the outset feeling as though she is going to be some sort of massive star. She never finds anything larger than an odd smattering of curious passersby willing to pay attention to her 'pro-choice' infused songs; this aspect of the film, her trajectory as the obvious half of the duo who sings -- as opposed to Suzanne who, as the film title suggests, does not -- is not horribly interesting. Does she sing well? Sure. Is this factoid central to the film's plot? No. What stands out is the playing out of the two's friendship over roughly a ten year period, beginning with a coming together over the central theme: reproductive rights, which are clearly in a state of
...let's just see where this takes us, eh?!