I think the Guardian gave this like one star. I usually check the Guardian reviews before watching any film. This was just a rubbish, not entertaining and stupid film.
An intriguing enjoyable movie with Juliette Binoche, as usual, brilliant. Shimell plays a good part (however, the character's day job as an author doesn't really hold water). Beyond the main 'mysterious' relationship, there is quite a fascinating relationship between Binoche's character and her son. The Tuscan town, as backdrop, frames the whole movie beautifully,
There is much to enjoy in this film, which changes gear in the middle to embrace enigma, and yet, as a whole is is not that enjoyable. Which character is each of the two of them assuming from scene to scene, and even within scenes? Unreliable narrators are all very well, but the film feels like a latercomer to post-modernism (with a glossy hue). That said, other people have enjoyed its take upon the tropes of European film. A writer, a restaurant, an art gallery, a hillside: you get the picture. Well, at least a Marvel character does not loom from within a public statue in a square.
‘Certified Copy’ is a film by Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami, who is well known for some of his past works. The film, which is set in Tuscany, narrates the romantic transformation between the lead actors. The film stars Juliette Binoche and William Shimell in the lead roles.
A female gallery shop owner attends the lecture given by famous French author James Miller along with her son. James Miller defends imitation art by claiming that every artwork is original in its own sense. The gallery owner invites miller to visit the countryside along with her. During their travel, he is mistaken as her husband by a woman in a café. Their relationship is left as a puzzle.
The film mainly portrays the relationship between the lead characters in perception as well as reality. The conversation that happens between Miller and the gallery owner during their visit to the countryside is quite interesting. The way the story moves is quite interesting. This is certainly not a clichéd man meets woman, falls in love, kind of drama. It is very intense due to the fact that the relationship between them is left to our own assumption.
The narration is brilliant throughout the movie and it never lags in any scene. The brilliancy of the filmmaker alone is not enough to make such a beautiful movie. The performance by the lead actors is truly amazing. The acting is done in a controlled way without any over performance. This is one of the best movies in the recent times that deal with male-female relationship.