Nora Cotterelle, a woman in her 30s is caring for her ill father, Louis Jenssens. While Nora tries to present a facade that all is well with her life, she is twice divorced and has a son, Elias, whose father is dead. Nora's present relationship is not going well, and she is soon to marry a businessman, while Elias is becoming increasingly withdrawn. A parallel storyline follows her former lover and second husband, Ismaël Vuillard, a musician, with whom she had lived for seven years. He is given to strange behaviour, and as a result he has been committed to a mental hospital, from which he is planning to escape. Nora learns that her father's digestive problems are actually cancer, and facing her father's death, Nora desperately seeks out Ismaël to ask that he reconnect with Elias, but he has mixed feelings about adopting her son. Moreover, he has met Arielle, another patient.
Kings and Queen, full of passion and humor, madness and grief, is close to a masterpiece.
– Steven Rea,
Philadelphia Inquirer,
18 Aug 2005
fresh:
There's a looseness to the camera work and storytelling that's appealingly breezy: This film feels, for better or worse, like real life.
– Moira MacDonald,
Seattle Times,
26 Aug 2005
fresh:
While these characters' lives are melodramatic, individual scenes burst with kinetic energy from fast editing and an script that deftly underscores the destructive nature of male-female relationships.
– Bob Longino,
Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
29 Oct 2005
fresh:
Funny, absurd, often mocking itself and always quoting cultural history.
– Susan Walker,
Toronto Star,
30 Jun 2006
fresh:
Desplechin's big, bold, iconoclastic feature Rois et Reine is a disconcerting film that can turn your head at the oddest moments.