The women of ‘Portrait of a Lady on Fire’ redraw the frame
NEW YORK — What’s inside the frame and what’s outside of it are electrifyingly synonymous in French filmmaker Céline Sciamma’s “Portrait of a Lady on Fire.”
It’s a sumptuous period romance set in 18th-century France about women making art free, for a moment, of traditional male frameworks. And the same could be said for the film itself, one crafted by women striving for a new cinematic dynamics and new images.
“It’s kind of a testimony of its own ideas,” Sciamma said. “There are two frames, two canvases that embody it. It’s not just an idea. This is also how we worked. The movie gives back this emotion because it’s full of it.”
The emotions stirred up by “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” have been considerable since its debut at last May’s Cannes Film Festival. There, it won best screenplay and Sciamma became the first female director to win the Queer Palme, an award given to the best LGBTQ-themed film across the festival.