Visually scintillating, musically avant-garde, dramatically turgid: This biopic of two cultural giants goes down like Brussels sprouts instead of foie gras. IOW, it takes effort to work through the two hour running time, when it should feel like savoring a rich delicacy. Pity, since Coco & Igor were the most fashionable couple imaginable, yet the movie paints them as dreary grinds.
The great Chanel herself couldn’t dress up this much brooding.
Coco & Igor – the movie – can be seen as a sequel to the generally superior Coco Before Chanel, albeit that one starred Audrey Tautou as Coco, while this one stars Anna Mouglalis. The iconic designer’s personality: mercurial and brusque in both. Not surprising, since design-driven entrepreneurs like her – think Steve Jobs today – create desperately desirable products with little regard for the personal relationships they brutalize along the way.
Those fascinated by either member of this legendary couple should see Coco & Igor.
It’s a ticket to fashion victimization for everyone else.
Mads Mikkelsen, a great actor, was merely good here as tortured musical artist Igor Stravinsky.
Anna Mouglalis’ performance as Coco Chanel was so internal as to be inert.
Awkward transitions between scenes and other directorial flaws mar the film. Still, the visualization of the famous “riot” that accompanied Stravinsky’s premiere of The Rite of Spring at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris and of Coco Chanel in her prime are worth the price of the ticket.
Much strenuous coupling.
No historical certainty exists about whether Coco & Igor had an affair, though she did put him and his family up at her country house. Given her proclivities for taking desirable married men as lovers, and his reputation as a notorious philanderer, it seems likely.