Cate Crafter

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French Cinema - Un homme idéal (A Perfect Man)

A thrilling almost Faustian tale of success, deceit and murder.

Mathieu Vasseur (Pierre Niney) has always wanted to become a famous writer, the only issue is that he can’t seem to get his work published, there is something he lacks. Talent. So when he happens across the journal of a recently deceased veteran while clearing out a house at his removal company job, he hazards his bets and steals the work.

What follows is a film that doesn’t stop pilling on the twists, and as Mathieu struggles to keep up with the facade he has built for himself his world comes crumbling down around him. It’s the age old saying: be careful what you wish for. A beautiful girlfriend and a lavish lifestyle come at a rather hefty price for Mathieu and throughout the film he tries desperately to hold onto those things, no matter what it takes. Even murder.

Un homme idéal, is a study in the fragility of the masculine identity. Mathieu has built himself up to be a seemingly perfect man (as the title of the film suggests), he is: handsome, intelligent and successful. But, he fears that his Girlfriend will leave him if she finds out he is a fraud. Everything he has done to establish himself has been in the pursuit of this one woman, and this insecurity that stems from the idea that he isn’t enough for her if he peels away all the fakery is what triggers his downfall. It’s brilliant psychological and sociological story telling that questions the unfair expectations put on men to be a certain archetype.