Vagabond

Agnès Varda created a chilling fiction around the true story of a young woman who froze to death in the south of France, the proverbial land of sunshine. Varda approaches the story of Mona-a young drop-out with only a backpack and tent to her name, who wanders south for the winter-from the stance of the curious journalist. She offers us the enigma of Mona. Thus this film of elegant clarity, while moving, is finally devastating in the crucial distance it takes. We know nothing of Mona's past, save the telling clue that she "doesn't like office work." While on the road, she makes the few contacts needed to stay alive and, occasionally, to stay human: a sexual liaison, a laugh over a smoke and a bottle of wine. But no one is allowed in, although all make the clumsy attempt; it is Sandrine Bonnaire's triumph, in a remarkable screen performance, that we, too, are shut out yet affected by this girl so indifferent to everyone around her. Mona's soft belligerence is a badge of an uncompromising ideal that can lead only to death; the film is a profound portrait of the will to alienation.

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