Movie Review: Jodie Foster shines as a psychoanalyst on the edge in āA Private Lifeā
- - Movie Review: Jodie Foster shines as a psychoanalyst on the edge in āA Private Lifeā
LINDSEY BAHR January 15, 2026 at 4:00 AM
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1 / 5Film Review - A Private LifeThis image released by Sony Pictures Classics shows Jodie Foster in a scene from "A Private Life." (JƩrƓme PrƩbois/Sony Pictures Classics via AP)
Jodie Foster plays a self-assured psychoanalyst whose composure unravels after a patient unexpectedly dies in the genre-bending French film āA Private Life.ā
Rebecca Zlotowskiās latest, in theaters Friday, is part noir, part comedy of remarriage, and part Freudian fever dream about past lives.
This is a film that does not abide by rules or play into any easy expectations about what it should be, resulting in big swings, tonal shifts and even a lurking Holocaust through-line. Also, oddly enough considering such grave themes and subjects, itās all done with a relatively light touch set, in part, by the cheeky needle drop at its opening: the Talking Heads song āPsycho Killer.ā Some parts work better than others, but you canāt help but admire the go-for-broke originality and unabashed femininity of it all. And anchoring it all is Foster, using the full force of her star power and impeccable French to make āA Private Life,ā unwieldy and complex as it is, go down as easy as a glass of gamay.
Fosterās character, Dr. Lilian Steiner, is an American expat living and working in France. Sheās an accomplished, sophisticated woman who believes she has a grasp on people and the world around her, recording and cataloging all her private sessions with clients on meticulously organized CDs. This act in and of itself is a little odd ā her son wonders why she doesnāt just use a more modern method, for instance. But it also kind of gets to the heart of why, perhaps, despite her evident intelligence, thereās a cold disconnect between analyst and subject. Is she even listening to them?
Lilian starts to wonder this herself after she receives a call that her client Paula ( Virginie Efira ) has died by suicide. Paula was not someone she believed was capable of this. Instead of looking inward, she goes back to the tapes to begin an amateur investigation to find some other explanation: It must be murder, she concludes. Suspects include Paulaās daughter ValĆ©rie (LuĆ na Bajrami) and husband Simon (Mathieu Amalric).
She also enlists a sidekick in her sleuthing, her ex-husband Gabriel (a delightful Daniel Auteuil ) who is more than happy to go along for the ride, to listen to her conspiracy theories over several bottles of wine, to be a decoy distraction so that she can snoop through Simonās house, and, ultimately, to just be there for her, no matter how unhinged sheās becoming. You can just see the love and admiration in his attentiveness. Heās not off put by the crazy; itās just part of what makes her, well, her. Their rekindled relationship, so effortlessly lived in, so mature, so fun, is by far the highlight of āA Private Life.ā
Itās a shame that their romance is basically a side show to the more convoluted rest, which involves a hypnotist and a revelation of a past life in which Lilian and Paula were members of the same WWII-era orchestra and lovers torn apart by jealous exes and Nazis. One of those Nazis is Lilianās son (Vincent Lacoste), which she awkwardly, drunkenly tells him at his birthday dinner to try to explain why theyāve never been that close. She's also completely disinterested in her grandchild, which might be one ālet's unpack thatā too many in this film. In other words, thereās a lot going on in āA Private Life,ā which Zlotowski co-wrote with Anne Berest.
One thing there's not enough of is Efira. She gets some moments in flashback, but most of them teeter on the ādead wife montageā cliche. Itās not that Zlotowski wasnāt aware of what she had in Efira (case in point, their poignant, tender work together in āOther Peopleās Childrenā), but perhaps she was counting on our familiarity to fill in the gaps.
āA Private Lifeā is ultimately Fosterās show anyway and she seems to relish the tricky assignment. The tone around her might be on the lighter side, but for Lilian, the stakes are grave with the very essence of her self-worth and lifeās work on the line. Itās a fascinating portrait of a woman essentially forced to rethink and revise all of the rules sheād lived by, the facts that she made sense of the world with and submit herself to the idea that some things might just be unknowable ā even for a know-it-all psychoanalyst.
āA Private Life,ā a Sony Pictures Classics release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for ālanguage, graphic nudity, brief violence, some sexual content.ā Running time: 105 minutes. Three stars out of four.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā