Two Women: Chloé Robichaud’s dramedy explores the lives of two women, next-door neighbours in an apartment building. One of them is a new mother, but they are both unsatisfied with the current state of their lives; united, they decide to transform and take control back. That libido is the only way they chose is, alas, a bit one-noted. The film is entertaining, as far as it goes, which is not much. Karine Gonthier-Hyndman plays the older of the two, the one who really puts things in overdrive; Laurence Leboeuf, as the new mother, is a bit more demure; they are both fine in playing the one dimension the material gave them. Editor Matthieu Bouchard keeps moving things along, even if one or two episodes could have been skipped without much loss. Director of photography Sara Mishara’s work is efficient and serviceable.