Better days review – a modest and honest study for women who are trying to deal with the drinking problem film

R.French rehabilitation drama begins with some painful realistic scenes that show the dark logo to maintain a hidden drinking problem. At night, after her children go to bed, my mom gets three Suzan (Valery Poniton) a box of high cabinet. Inside is hidden from vodka, which carefully gives up the metal water bottles for the next day. There is no pleasure in drinking it. It makes her fog at work and separates from her children. Boniton, known in France for the roles of comedy, is wonderful, with its warm worn out performance, not the elaboration of passion in it.

Susan hit her rocky bottom after a car accident. The court puts its children to care for their ancestors and orders them accurately. First, denial comes. “Some wine with dinner,” she told the doctor who asks her about drinking her in the unity of all females. Among the other residents Diane (Michel Larok), a famous actor who is honored by other women, and twenty things Alice (Sabrina Awazani), who describes herself as a party girl but her stories, when she shares them in the group, seems more distinctive than fun.

The best days in most of them are a modest and honest drama, insight into shame and stigma, especially for female alcohol addicts, although it is slightly evacuated through some of the support he supports. He stumbles a little in the last 30 minutes or so as well, when Susan travels with Diane and Alice to the desert in Morocco for the sand dune race in jeep. The journey is organized by Dennis mechanics (Clovis Cornelliac) who knew car maintenance for women. The sink is blown by sand, as a predictive plot about intimate friendship and work together.

Better days in UK cinemas from September 26.

Leave a Comment