
Portrait of a Lady on Fire 4 ½ stars
Portrait de la Jeune Fille en Feu or Portrait of a Lady on Fire is a complex love story with only female characters set in eighteenth century France that is certainly very difficult to describe. A young painter, Marianne is commissioned to paint a portrait of a noblewoman’s daughter (Heloise) who has spent her adult life in a convent and is to be married to a Milanese suitor. The problem is Heloise is to think that Marianne is there as a companion and is not to know that her real purpose is to paint a portrait. Thus, the painter has to do the painting in secret without the benefit of a posed subject. The relationship between the two young women changes and grows throughout the slowly developing plot as we learn more about Heloise. How she wants to enjoy her freedom and is less than enthused about her planned marriage, about the suicide of her sister and the failed attempt at a portrait by a previous painter. It is a well put together love story about a slowly growing attraction between the characters and a resentment of the circumstances of their lives. The story is told with very few characters and a minimum of dialogue. An additional feature is how the film shows just how difficult it is for a painter to create a painting, something I don’t remember seeing before. For those who love period romances, Portrait of a Lady on Fire is highly recommended.