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Certified Copy (2010) Copie conforme [The Criterion Collection]

Posted By: MirrorsMaker
720p (HD) / BDRip IMDb
Certified Copy (2010) Copie conforme [The Criterion Collection]

Certified Copy (2010)
BDRip 720p | MKV | 1280x692 | x264 @ 4574 Kbps | 106 min | 3,97 Gb
Audio: Français (mostly) AC3 5.1 @ 640 Kbps | Subs: English, Ελληνικά
Genre: Drama, Romance

Director: Abbas Kiarostami
Writers: Caroline Eliacheff (collaborator on screenplay), Abbas Kiarostami
Stars: Juliette Binoche, William Shimell, Jean-Claude Carrière

The great Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami travels to Tuscany for a luminous and provocative romance in which nothing is as it appears. What seems at first to be a straightforward tale of two people – played by Oscar-winning actress Juliette Binoche and opera singer William Shimell – getting to know each other over the course of an afternoon gradually reveals itself as something richer, stranger, and trickier: a mind-bending reflection on authenticity, in art as well as in relationships. Both cerebrally and emotionally engaging, Certified Copy reminds us that love itself is an enigma.

IMDB - 10 wins

Kiarostami’s first film made outside of Iran is a truly cosmopolitan affair: a goddess of a French leading lady (Juliette Binoche), a British opera singer (William Shimell) as his leading man, an Italian location and crew and a meandering conversation that slips between English, French and Italian. Binoche’s antiques dealer and single mother (she’s never called by name in the film and is identified as “Elle” in the credits, which in French means “she”) arranges a kind of date with the assured, unflappable author, driving him through the alleys of her small town (the river of brick and sky rolling across her windshield is both a sublime image and gorgeous metaphor for the gulf between the two) through the countryside to a nearby village to view an “original copy” as they debate the meaning of authenticity. As she spars and flirts with the charming but distant author over an afternoon in a lovely rural Italian village, Kiarostami shifts the ground from under us.

Imagine a cinematic equivalent of a Picasso cubist portrait, but instead of showing multiple perspectives of an object in an image, it presents experiences from different periods in a life in a single narrative. This first date segues into a longtime marriage and the philosophical arguments become long-standing personal issues built up over years of marriage. The breathtaking tectonic shift is all the more impressive by the subtlety and slyness of the transition, played out in long takes and the easy rhythms Kiarostami’s style of heightened naturalism. What could have been a neat trick or a modernist exercise is given resonance by the rich pageant of experience onscreen – a parade of hopeful young newlyweds and stooped old married couples continue their life story in both directions by proxy – and by the vibrant and fluid emotional life churning in Binoche’s performance.

Beautiful and painful and mysterious and strangely real, this is no copy of life as we view, certified or not, but it is alive and profound and authentic.
(click to enlarge)
Certified Copy (2010) Copie conforme [The Criterion Collection]

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