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‘Nenette’ Celebrates Longing, Love and Family

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

“Nenette and Boni,” opening tonight for a weeklong run at the Port Theatre in Corona del Mar, is another understated triumph for gifted French writer-director Claire Denis. It is an exquisitely evoked expression of an aching longing for love and family set in working-class Marseilles.

Denis has immense, steadfast respect for seemingly ordinary people and their lives. Her films have a quality of gravity--yet are often hilarious. They also have an intimacy and flow that seem spontaneous and at the same time precisely right.

Gregoire Colin’s Boni is a tall, sturdy 19-year-old pizza worker given to pouring out his sexual fantasies (involving the neighborhood baker’s wife, Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi) in his journal. She is a ravishing earth mother incarnate, radiating health and happiness, as voluptuous as the pastries her devoted, hard-working American husband (Vincent Gallo) makes. In contrast to Boni and his sister Nenette (Alice Houri), the bakery couple, who have several children, live in rare contentment.

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Except for his loneliness, Boni seems otherwise satisfied with his routine existence. He has a rabbit for a pet and lives in an apartment that’s awfully small but has a great view of the harbor from its rooftop. He has some pals, a flexible work schedule, and it’s hard to understand why he doesn’t have--or try to have--a girlfriend. Maybe it’s because his mother, who apparently adored him, has recently died.

That Nenette, who is off at boarding school, never came to visit while their mother was dying sets off Boni’s rage when she turns up. She has run away from school because she’s finally faced the fact that she’s pregnant. The heart of “Nenette and Boni” is how--with much wariness--brother and sister thrash through an attempt at some kind of harmonious relationship.

*

At one point the father (Jacques Nolot), who abandoned his family some time in the past, turns up with a lavish offering of food--pathetically craving a reconciliation. Their mother, he tries to explain, “was never a ‘real woman’ with me.”

“Nenette and Boni,” which has a gentle Tindersticks score, is a tender, impassioned celebration of life--about making pizza, about giving birth and about how the two are connected. Colin, Houri and Nolot never let us catch them acting.

* Unrated. Times guidelines: It includes strong language, nudity, sexual fantasizing.

‘Nenette and Boni’

Gregoire Colin: Boni

Alice Houri: Nenette

Jacques Nolot: The Father

Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi: The Baker Woman

Vincent Gallo: The Baker

A Strand Releasing presentation. Director Claire Denis. Producer: Georges Benayoun. Executive producer: Francoise Guglielmi. Screenplay by Jean-Pol Fargeau and Denis. Cinematographer: Agnes Godard. Editor: Yann Dedet. Costumes: Elisabeth Tavernier. Music: Tindersticks. Set designer: Arnaud de Moleron. In French with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes.

* At the Port Theatre, 2905 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, (714) 673-6260.

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