Despite the halting, even lifeless rhythms of the finished film, co-writer (with Rebecca Zlotowski) and director Audrey Diwan's contribution to the Emmanuelle saga does feel significant, at least in terms of adding one or two layers of complication to a character typically premised on a youthful enthusiasm. Noémie Merlant's Emmanuelle is no longer a trophy wife eager to please an indifferent husband by exploring her sexuality. She is a little older, maritally unentangled and enjoying a successful career swanning around high-end getaways with a tape measure. This particular job also offering the ever-present opportunity to jet around and mechanically seduce the men that Emmanuelle shares first-class seating with. Similarly, the anonymity and access provided by her role as a quality controller for a pernickety hotel chain allows her to slip in and out of a series of luxurious settings.
Emmanuelle can taste affluence then but is unable to truly linger. Unmoored from any specific interpersonal relationship, other than a corporate voice that demands she engineer faults where none exist, Emmanuelle slips into a routine that is unfulfilled or even alienated. Caged within Hong Kong's lavish St. Regis hotel, ran by Naomi Watts in little more than a cameo, Emmanuelle rattles around, picking at the other residents and finding little real satisfaction. Unfortunately, since this listlessness accounts for the lion's share of Emmanuelle's runtime, Diwan's film is similarly numb. Developments inside these walls are diverting rather than intriguing; the sex that Emmanuelle kills time with perfunctory rather than exciting. Luckily, Emmanuelle is eventually given reason to leave her temporary base and venture out onto the streets of the city-state. Diwan's film is suddenly frantic: Laurent Tangy's camera darting around the statuesque and striking Merlant, appraising this underdressed woman as she suddenly explodes into life in cramped quarters.