SYNOPSIS
Adèle, an 85 years old lady, confronts very hardly the loss of her husband, after 63 years of shared life. An unexpected dream, will bring Adele to relive the last moments of their life together, at the museum. She will be able to overcome the pain.
WHO IS THE STORY ABOUT?
The story is about Adèle, an 85 year old woman, whose husband dies. Adèle is an old lady but with a lot of energy, she is well-educated, a retired literature teacher. She is a strong woman, she likes to control things around her.
Victor, her husband, is a quiet and docile person. He doesn’t like to make any decisions, in fact he has little initiative but a great adaptability. He is a retired history teacher, good and gentle with his students. That’s one of the many things Adèle loved about him.
Alice, their daughter, is the third important character in the story. She’s an introverted and resolute woman in her fifties. She controls her emotions very well and tends to take care of others before herself. That’s why, suffering for her father's death, she takes care of her mother instead of consoling herself.
What Adèle wants is her husband back. And through her daughter’s moral support and a journey in her own memories, she’ll be able to understand that having Victor back is impossible and that the only solution is the conscious and serene acceptance of what happened. She is a relatable victim of life, because we all have the same ultimate destination. To accept her husband’s death is to accept her own fate at the same time. This is the heart of the story.
The story is structured in two major parts: present and past. In the present Adèle, the main character, with her daughter’s help, has to deal with her husband’s loss. In the past, what the characters want, unconsciously, is to feel alive again.
They find themselves in a painting and they become eternal because art has no time.
WHY I WANT TO TELL THIS STORY?
I want to tell this story, Blessed Days, because it belongs to me. It belongs to my experience at the museum, which has led me to write this script. Every Saturday and Sunday from September until February, I have worked at the Petit Palais as a surveillance agent and I was lucky enough to observe people 10 hours a week, with their neuroses, their imperfections, that make them unique beings. As a silent spectator, I have stored contemplative glances, watchful eyes, moments of sharing and moments of solitude. All that I have experienced at the museum has enriched my awareness of this story. The endless catalogue of the people I have met has allowed me to build a whole world around my characters and to understand the profound meaning behind every little detail of this story. I want to tell this story because everyone has lived it or might live it. I want to exorcise the loss and to praise good feelings as protectors. One Sunday afternoon, I was supervising one room (paintings of the twentieth century). An elderly couple, hand in hand, walked in front of me. I looked at them and I gently greeted them as they were going through the whole exhibit. After a few minutes they came back to the entrance, focused on their walk, and they went out. Shortly after they came back and traced the same path. And so on, back and forth, the same path, with their heads down, as if it were a sport. I started to wonder. Who were they? What were they experiencing? Why had they chosen this place not for the value that it has but with another purpose? Why did they look down and not around? There were so many beautiful paintings ... Back and forth. Then they never returned. I waited for them but I had to give into the thought that they had left me. Their absence, combined with their old age, their clumsy and lame walk, made me think about death. That's why Victor dies in my story.
The plot tells the life of a couple, walking into the museum, who arrives in front of a framework which they identify themselves in.
The painting in question is called "The Sodoma Angels" by Gustave Moreau.
The transmigration of bodies (mortality condition) into a piece of art, frozen in time (eternity condition), points out a fear in the characters, Victor and Adèle, against the passing of time and the transience of life. I believe that the comparison between time and art is praised perfectly by the poet John Keats in his "Ode On A Grecian Urn”.
“...When old age shall this generation waste,
Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe Than ours,
a friend to man, to whom thou say’st,
“Beauty is truth, truth beauty,”
– that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”
THEMES
- Dealing with mourning.
- Love when it approaches death.
- Old age.
GENRE
The genre is drama. This story depends on the emotional and relational evolution of Adèle. There’s a human struggle.
NARRATIVE QUESTIONS
The main narrative questions of the story are the following:
- What are the final steps that Adele has to pass to move on from her husband's mourning?
- What’s the meaning of the painting?
- Why Adele decides to go back to the museum?
- What leads Adele to peacefully accept her husband’s death?
AESTHETIC APPROACH
Inspirations: “Coming Home” by Zhang Yimou (2014) ; “Amour” by Michael Haneke (2012) ; “Le Week-End” by Roger Michell (2013) ; “45 Years” by Andrew Haigh (2015) ; “The House of Small Cubes” by Kunio Kato (2008) ; “Head Over Heels” by Timothy Reckart (2012). Regarding the direction of this film and what is important to me visually I'm going to create, with the help of the DOP, the Art Director, the editor, the colorist and all my crew, two completely different worlds for the past and for the present. For the present, to describe the sense of claustrophobia and to trap the protagonist in her condition of impotence, I will use close ups and, depending on the location found, with the help of my director of photography, I will choose to "entrap" the main character, Adèle.
Regarding the museum, we’ll use long shots to represent a majesty that emphasizes human littleness in front of nature.