Entertainment

Dwell on squatters

ANY question that Bel gian actress Deborah Francois is a star in the making is dispelled in “Unmade Beds,” the London-set romantic romp directed by Alexis Dos Santos, who was born in Argentina.

New Yorkers first saw Francois as a troubled teen mom in the Dardenne brothers’ “L’Enfant,” then as a mysterious woman in the French thriller “The Page Turner.”

Now, in “Unmade Beds,” 22-year-old Francois impresses as Vera, a French woman who moves into a London squat in hopes of forgetting a former boyfriend.

Another resident of the squat, in a sprawling industrial warehouse, is Axl (played by skinny, mop-haired Fernando Tielve), who moved from Madrid to London to find his estranged father.

The lives of Axl and Vera crisscross in a playful style reminiscent of early Godard (Francois even resembles Godard’s 1960s muse, Anna Karina).

The depiction of life in the squat is romanticized (everybody’s having fun and the authorities never bother them), but “Unmade Beds” entertains nevertheless, thanks to solid work by the leads and playful lensing by Jakob Ihre of Sweden.

vam@nypost.com