Trois vies et une seule mort (Three Lives and Only One Death). 1996. France. Directed by Raúl Ruiz. Screenplay by Ruiz, Pascal Bonitzer. With Marcello Mastroianni. In French; English subtitles. 123 min.
“Perhaps the most accessible movie of the Chilean-born Raúl Ruiz (who has some 90 titles to his credit)—a sunny showcase for the charismatic talents of the late Marcello Mastroianni, who plays four separate roles, as well as a testament to Ruiz’s imaginative postsurrealist talents as a yarn spinner and a weaver of magical images and ideas. Mixing ideas borrowed liberally and freely from stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Isak Dinesen with whimsical notions that could belong to no one but Ruiz (such as the tale of a millionaire who willingly and successfully turns himself into a beggar), this 1996 French comedy with a Paris setting often resembles a kind of euphoric free fall through the works and fancies of a writer like Jorge Luis Borges. Among the spirited cast members are Mastroianni’s daughter Chiara, Melvil Poupaud (City of Pirates), Anna Galiena, Marisa Paredes, and Arielle Dombasle” (Jonathan Rosenbaum).