Film Review
After the darkly existential chamber piece
Histoire
de Marie et Julien (2003) and the brooding Balzac adaptation
Ne touchez pas la hache (2007),
Jacques Rivette's latest cinematic offering is a considerably lighter
affair, a thinly sketched but nonetheless moving little romantic drama
set in the world of the travelling circus. Although the film has
far less substance than we have come to expect from this still highly
regarded relic of the French New Wave (it is in fact Rivette's shortest
feature to date), it does have a subtle poignancy and charm that
make it one of the director's most humane and perceptive films.
Here Rivette is reunited with Jane Birkin, the outlandish sixties sex
symbol who was once considered Britain's answer to Brigitte Bardot (and
still is in some quarters). Birkin had previously featured in
Rivette's memorable masterpiece
La
Belle noiseuse (1991) and, remarkably, scarcely looks a day
older in this film. Here she is cast opposite Sergio Castellitto,
the charismatic Italian actor who starred in Rivette's
Va
savoir (2001). Birkin and Castellitto are two of a
kind, sympathetic actors who both speak with thick accents that do not
allow us to forget their country of birth. They each play a
character who appears to be living in exile, prevented from finding his
or her identity by a deep-seated reluctance to confront a troubled
past. She is the reluctant manager of a lacklustre
theatrical troupe, he is the drifter. Both are steeped in mystery
which the other feels compelled to unravel, with the inevitable result
that they fall in love. Despite the slightness of the screenplay,
Birkin and Castellitto both turn in a compelling performance and
succeed in making their characters harrowingly believable.
36 vues du Pic Saint-Loup
offers a simple tale, simply told, melancholy and humour woven into a
gentle fable of love lost and love regained. The main characters'
search for identity and purpose is reflected in the circus's faltering
attempt to find an audience as it makes its haphazard way along the
highways and byways of France's achingly beautiful Languedoc
region. The potent circus motif serves two functions: to
connect the protagonists with their past and help resurrect the spirits
of past lovers, and to remind us that our lives, for all their apparent
complexity, are really no more than brief circus acts. In making
this film, the eighty-year old Rivette is perhaps acknowledging that
his time in the ring is almost over, that it will soon be time for him
to take his bow and let other acts take his place.
All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Rivette film:
Le Coup du berger (1956)
Film Synopsis
A small circus troupe is about to embark on its summer season when its owner
dies suddenly. Realising that their livelihoods are in peril, the members
of the circus get in touch with their boss's estranged daughter Kate and
urge her to take over the management of the circus. Kate has every
reason to turn down the invitation. Fifteen years ago, her lover Antoine
was accidentally killed by her father and she abandoned the circus not long
afterwards. To the troupe's surprise, Kate agrees to drop everything
and return to the circus. On her way back, Kate has a flat tyre and
is rescued by an Italian man, Vittorio. Fascinated by Kate's life,
the latter decides to spend the next few days in her company. Vittoria
is intrigued to find out why Kate left the circus and why she is now so eager
to resume her old way of life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.