Philip French 

The Bird – review

A reclusive woman reconnects with the outside world via a pigeon in this art-house film, says Philip French
  
  

The Bird
'Self-consciously art-house': Sandrine Kiberlain in The Bird. Photograph: PR

In this self-consciously art-house movie, freckled French beauty Sandrine Kiberlain looks very strained as Anne, a Bordeaux restaurant employee living alone, rejecting all offers of human contact. She's coping with a terrible secret grief, clues to which are grudgingly fed to us. Eventually she moves towards a form of closure, partly through helping the eponymous pigeon. When Anne goes for a big weep at the cinema, she has the good taste to see Mizoguchi's The Life of Oharu, one of the greatest films about a woman suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune in silence.

 

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