John F Kennedy, president of the United States once stated that “The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie, deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive and unrealistic”. This quote reflects the messages in the film “He loves me, he loves me not” where L. Coloumbani cleverly allows the viewer to understand the importance of perspectives when looking at the truth. It allows us to think and not just jump ahead and assume that whatever we see from a person’s perspective is the truth. In the first half of the film “He loves me, he loves me not” the viewer is persuaded to believe that an innocent girl named Angelique who is madly in love with a married cardiologist (Loic), is being used and abused by him. However in the latter half of the film we, the viewer, see the film from Loic’s point of view which then we find out that what we just saw was just pathological point of view of Angelique who is diagnosed with Erotomania in the end of the film. Gradually we start to relook at what we just saw and start to realise that what Angelique saw as a relationship was just an illusion. Furthermore, in the second half of the film L.Coloumbani has also recreated an image of loic as of a loving and caring husband of a standard family. It is a picture of a happy and perfect marriage, however is ruined from the unknown stalker Angelique who frequently sends him gifts and messages. Though for Angelique we have misunderstood a girl who we thought was a sweet and loving girl who was the victim of a player, for a person we now know is a dangerous harasser who ruined a man’s life. Therefore, it allows for us to now open our minds to the different perspective and that the truth is never just from a person’s perspective. Throughout the film, L.Coloumbani explores the theme of reality versus illusion. In the first half of the film she has allowed for us to view Angelique’s point of view of her re