Focusing on the turbulent personal life of painter and sculptor Niki de Saint Phalle, Céline Sallette's directorial debut, which debuted at Cannes, barely scuffs the surface of a deep creative legacy.

It is an ongoing mystery why so many artists’ biopics, though undoubtedly coming from a place of deep admiration, choose to ignore the very thing that makes their subjects extraordinary — their art — in favor of outlining the less extraordinary (however torrid) circumstances of their private lives and loves. The latest example: the attractive but slight directorial debut of French actress Céline Sallette (“House of Tolerance,” “Rust and Bone”). Her feature “Niki” is a portrait of pioneering French-American painter, sculptor and illustrator Niki de Saint Phalle, in which the closest we ever get to any of her actual pieces is seeing the back of a canvas or two, as Niki (Charlotte Le Bon), bespeckled with paint splatter that highlights her delicate elf-princess beauty, frowns at her efforts in dissatisfaction. What exactly is she looking at? Unless you’re already intimately acquainted with every phase of her multivalent career and can navigate the film’s rather haphazard chronology, there is no way to know.
Related Stories
VIP+Fall Season’s Scripted Reduction Bodes Badly for Broadcast TV

'Secret Level' Director Tim Miller and Epic Games Execs Talk Hollywood's Relationship With Unreal Engine as Version 5.5 Launches
De Saint Phalle was indeed a very beautiful woman who, as the movie begins in the early 1950s, is modeling for a magazine fashion shoot — an early showcase for Marion Moulès and Matthieu Camblor’s consistently covetable costume design. Mute, pliable and immaculately made up, with a tiara glistening in her hair, Niki has her photo taken just before a bulb blows and the studio is plunged into darkness. “What’s her name again?” mutters the unseen photographer to his assistant. “I don’t remember,” is the offhand reply, which could ironically foreshadow Niki’s eventual fame if it didn’t occur in a film that is also curiously unwilling to refer to the woman by her full name.
Popular on Variety
Niki snaps off her borrowed jewels, signs her payment slip and rushes back to the small Paris apartment she shares with her dashing husband Harry (John Robinson) and their infant daughter, who promptly soils the bedspread on which she is plunked down. When Harry gets home, he is affectionately exasperated to discover that Niki, in a hurry to get to rehearsals for her Cocteau stage production, has simply wrapped the dirty coverlet around the kid’s midriff in lieu of a fresh diaper. This is how we know that Niki is a free spirit with an archly non-traditional approach to motherhood, and to life.
The young family moved to Paris from the U.S., a decision they claim was made to get away from McCarthyism, racism, nuclear attacks and Harry’s mother. But despite their free-thinking, progressive leanings and bohemian lifestyle, Niki is assailed by symbolism-heavy flashbacks to a repressed childhood trauma — lurid sequences rendered in an oversaturated palette to differentiate them from the tasteful, sunny arrangements of DP Victor Seguin’s photography in other scenes. Niki’s panic attacks become more frequent and when Harry discovers the stash of knives that Niki has taken to compulsively hiding under their shared mattress, Niki allows herself to be committed to an institution where they treat her with barbaric doses of electroshock therapy.
But it’s also there that Niki discovers the therapeutic benefits of creative expression. Once released, she throws herself into painting as an outlet for her still-unresolved neuroses. She does less acting, breezily turning down the lead role in a Robert Bresson film, and devotes herself to developing her naive but forceful visual style, along the way becoming close to Swiss sculptor Jean Tinguely (a lovely, soft turn from Damien Bonnard) and his first wife, Eva (Judith Chemla). That Niki would go on, after several affairs and her split from Harry, to become Tinguely’s second wife, and for a time, the French-art-world Bonnie to his Clyde is, rather amazingly, outside the frame of Sallette’s film, which concludes on a note of artistic self-fulfillment that Sallette and co-writer Samuel Doux’s screenplay has done little to build to.
Without including Niki’s artwork (an absence that rather unfortunately recalls the “30 Rock” gag in which an unlicensed Janis Joplin biopic is barred from using any of Joplin’s songs and has to give its heroine a different name), we are left to guess at the results when Niki pulls a doll’s head from its body for use in some offscreen found-object collage, or when she describes to Tinguely her idea for firing a gun at a canvas loaded with paint squibs. The latter was the stunt that established the real de Saint Phalle as a member of a new, rebellious avant-garde; it’s a shame that Sallette’s film, ultimately conventional despite some stylish split-screen and Le Bon’s intricate performance, couldn’t have been just a little inspired by the same spirit of iconoclasm.
Read More About:
Jump to Comments‘Niki’ Review: Charlotte Le Bon Stars in a Pretty but Flimsy Portrait of an Artist Minus Her Art
Reviewed at Cannes Film Festival (Un Certain Regard). May 24, 2024. Running time: 98 MIN.
More from Variety

Meta Announces Ban on Russian State Media, Citing Deceptive Influence Operations

Hollywood’s Next Superhero: Purpose-Led Branding

Australia Proposing to Ban Children From Social Media, Joins Wave of Asian Government Crackdowns on Platforms

Late-Night TV vs. YouTube: Data-Driven Tips on Which Is Better for Celebs Promoting Films
Most Popular
Luke Bryan Reacts to Beyoncé’s CMA Awards Snub: ‘If You’re Gonna Make Country Albums, Come Into Our World and Be Country With…

Donald Glover Cancels 2024 Childish Gambino Tour Dates After Hospitalization: ‘I Have Surgery Scheduled and Need Time Out to Heal’

‘Joker 2’ Ending: Was That a ‘Dark Knight’ Connection? Explaining What’s Next for Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker

‘Love Is Blind' Creator Reveals Why They Didn’t Follow Leo and Brittany After Pods, if They'll Be at Reunion (EXCLUSIVE)

Rosie O'Donnell on Becoming a 'Big Sister' to the Menendez Brothers, Believes They Could Be Released From Prison in the ‘Next 30 Days’

Coldplay’s Chris Martin Says Playing With Michael J. Fox at Glastonbury Was ‘So Trippy’: ‘Like Being 7 and Being in Heaven…

‘That ’90s Show’ Canceled After Two Seasons on Netflix, Kurtwood Smith Says: ‘We Will Shop the Show’

Why Critically Panned ‘Joker 2’ Could Still Be in the Awards Race for Lady Gaga and Joaquin Phoenix

Dakota Fanning Got Asked ‘Super-Inappropriate Questions’ as a Child Actor Like ‘How Could You Have Any Friends?’ and Can ‘You Avoid Being a Tabloid…

Charli XCX Reveals Features for ‘Brat’ Remix Album Include Ariana Grande, Julian Casablancas, Tinashe and More

Must Read
- Film
COVER | Sebastian Stan Tells All: Becoming Donald Trump and Starring in 2024’s Most Controversial Movie
By Andrew Wallenstein 2 weeks
- TV
Menendez Family Slams Netflix’s ‘Monsters’ as ‘Grotesque’ and ‘Riddled With Mistruths’: ‘The Character Assassination of Erik and Lyke Is Repulsive…

- TV
‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Part 2 to Air on CBS After Paramount Network Debut

- TV
50 Cent Sets Diddy Abuse Allegations Docuseries at Netflix: ‘It’s a Complex Narrative Spanning Decades’ (EXCLUSIVE)

- Shopping
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Sets Digital and Blu-ray/DVD Release Dates

Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXOAjp%2BgpaVfp7K3tcSwqmimmaC2br7Er6Cer12YtaK%2By6irrZ1dobJurs6nZJyZnqOytHmQa2pvaGFsg3N%2Bjg%3D%3D