Biography: life and films
Patrice Leconte is something of an enigma, a prolific, well-regarded
film director that doesn't fit the mould of either the conventional
auteur nor the traditional mainstream filmmaker. He has something
of schizoid nature, and you might think, looking through his
filmography, that there are in fact two Patrice Lecontes - one beloved
by the critics for his intimate human dramas, the other blessed with a
knack of filling cinemas for weeks on end with tacky populist
comedies. Is it possible that the director who brought us the
intense and hauntingly introspective
Monsieur
Hire was also the man who had previously helmed the cult hit
Les Bronzés? It
is the hyper-eclectic nature of Leconte's cinema that makes him
stand out from the crowd, and also makes him so difficult to get a handle on. Is he a
director who is frantically searching for an identity, or is he just
someone who gets bored easily and has to keep genre-hopping in order to
maintain his enthusiasm for filmmaking? A Patrice Leconte film
always feels like a lucky dip. No matter how many films of his
you watch, you can have no idea what Leconte is going to come up with
next. Perhaps that is why we love him so much.
Patrice Leconte was born on 12th November 1947 in Paris, France,
although he grew up in Tours. He began making films for his own
amusement from the age of 15 and enrolled in the elite French film
school IDHEC (Institut des hautes études
cinématographiques) in 1967. After his graduation, he made
a few short films (
Le Laboratoire de
l'angoisse, 1971, and
La
Famille heureuse, 1973). He then worked for a time as a
critic on the Cahiers du Cinéma and contributed to the popular
cartoon magazine
Pilote, both
as a writer and a cartoonist. He also made some publicity films
before making his feature debut with the comedy
Les Vécés étaient
fermés de l'intérieur (1976). The film,
which brought together Jean Rochefort and Coluche, was a massively
fraught production and ended up being both a critical and a commercial
failure. After this setback, Leconte redirected his efforts
towards advertising.
In 1977, Patrice Leconte was approached by the popular comedy
troupe L'Équipe du Splendid (which included Michel Blanc,
Gérard Jugnot, Christian Clavier and Thierry Lhermitte) and
invited to direct a film adaptation of their
café-théâtre play
Amours,
coquillages et crustacés. That film,
Les
Bronzés, was to be one of the biggest cult French
films of the 1970s and attracted 2.3 million spectators, Leconte's
first success as a film director. It also launched the film
careers of the members of the Splendid troupe, and within a few years
most of them would become household names in France.
Reluctantly, Leconte then directed the sequel,
Les Bronzés font du ski
(1979), which was also a box office hit.
In the early 1980s, Leconte notched up three more successes with
further comedies featuring members of the Splendid team -
Viens
chez moi, j'habite chez une copine (1981),
Ma femme s'appelle reviens
(1982) and
Circulez y'a rien à voir
(1983). Then, having grown tired of comedy, he decided to branch
out into other genres. His next film,
Les Spécialistes (1985),
was a hard-edged action thriller starring Bernard Giraudeau and
Gérard Lanvin. Attracting an audience of 5.3 million, this
was Leconte's last major commercial success until
Ridicule, a decade later.
From the mid-1980s, Patrice Leconte moved away from popular genre films and
developed a more intimate kind of cinema, allowing him to slowly build
a reputation as a serious film auteur.
Tandem (1987) was the first of
Leconte's films to be critically acclaimed. An intense drama, the
film featured Gérard Jugnot in his first important dramatic role
and was nominated for six Césars (including Best Film) but only
won the award for Best Poster Design (thanks to Louis Malle's
Au revoir, les enfants stealing
virtually every award). Leconte then made what many consider to
be his greatest film,
Monsieur Hire (1989), a sublime
adaptation of a Georges Simenon novel. With superb performances
from Michel Blanc and Sandrine Bonnaire, this is a dark and haunting
exploration of voyeurism, whose seductive sensuality is matched only by
Leconte's next film,
Le Mari de la coiffeuse (1990),
a beautifully oniric study in desire.
Le Parfum d'Yvonne (1994)
completes the trilogy of sensual near-masterpieces that now rank as
Leconte's most inspired work.
Once again, having triumphed in one style of film, Leconte felt
impelled to try something different.
Ridicule
(1996) was his first attempt at a lavish period drama, a sophisticated
court comedy with a star-studded cast and Hollywood-style production
values. The film was a commercial and critical success, both in
France and abroad. It was nominated for twelve Césars
(a rare achievement) and won awards in four categories, including Best
Director and Best Film. The film was also nominated for the Palme
d'Or at Cannes and an Academy Award, although these prizes eluded
it. In his next film, Leconte brought together French film icons
Jean-Paul Belmondo and Alain Delon for the first time since they last
appeared together in
Borsalino (1970). The
film,
Une chance sur deux (1998), was not well-regarded by the critics, but it did attract a million
spectators.
The success of
Ridicule
raised Patrice Leconte's international profile, and his next films were
eagerly anticipated both at home and abroad.
La Fille sur le pont (1999), a
romantic comedy shot as a film noir, proved to be a minor let down
(it did win Daniel Auteuil his second Best Actor César),
although the director redeemed himself with his second period drama,
the beautifully atmospheric
La Veuve de Saint-Pierre
(2000). His next films
Félix et Lola (2001) and
Rue des plaisirs (2002) drew
little attention, but
L'Homme du train (2002), a dark
metaphysical drama uniting Jean Rochefort and ageing rock singer Johnny
Halliday, was widely regarded. After the brooding romantic drama
Confidences trop intimes
(2004), Leconte scored his greatest box office triumph with
Les Bronzés 3 - amis pour la vie
(2006), a shameless nostalgia fest that attracted over ten million
spectators in France but was ignored (and rightly so) by the rest of
the world.
Partly as a result of
Les
Bronzés 3 (which rates as probably his worst film),
Leconte's critical standing has taken quite a knock lately. His
next film
La Guerre des miss
(2009), a lacklustre comedy, did nothing to restore his reputation and
was widely reviled. Perhaps this is why for his latest film,
Voir
la mer (2011), Leconte has returned to the more sensual and
introspective kind of drama that first brought him critical
acclaim. Although the film was not a great success, it does
represent a welcome return to the more mature strand of the director's
oeuvre. It is possible that Patrice Leconte's greatest films are yet to
come...
© James Travers 2012
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