Film Review
Luis Buñuel followed up to his internationally acclaimed
hard-hitting social drama
Los Olvidados (1950) with a
series of comparatively low-key works for a Mexican audience, of which
A Woman Without Love (a.k.a.
Una mujer sin amor) is one of the
least known and most underrated. For a director who is renowned
for his iconoclastic approach to cinema,
A Woman Without Love is a
surprisingly conventional melodrama, which the director would later
describe as his worst film. Whilst the film is certainly not one
of Buñuel's most memorable - it has none of the surrealist
flourishes and dark anti-establishment humour that we associate with
the director - it is nonetheless an engaging, technically impressive
piece, one that functions as a fairly uncompromising critique of
bourgeois Mexican society.
The film is based on Guy de Maupassant's popular novella
Pierre et Jean, which had
previously been adapted by French filmmaker André Cayatte in
1943. Buñuel's original brief when he was hired to direct
the film was to deliver a shot-by-shot remake of Cayatte's film,
although Buñuel wisely went against the wishes of his producers
and gave the film his own interpretation, which is noticeably bleaker
than Cayatte's. The film's unceasingly sombre tone, achieved by
some atmospheric lighting and a suitably menacing score, gives it the
aura of a film noir, the tension building to a denoument that is
startling in its intensity and poignancy.
In almost every department,
A Woman
Without Love matches the quality of comparable melodramas coming
out of Hollywood at the time (films that were pejoratively referred to
as 'women's pictures'). Not only is the film very well-directed and
well-written, it is exceptionally well-cast, and you struggle to
comprehend just why Buñuel disliked it so much. The
Argentinean born actress Rosario Granados (who had previously starred
in Buñuel's
El gran calavera)
gives a stunning performance as the unfortunate heroine who is both a
victim of circumstances and a prisoner of her husband's hypocritical
bourgeois mindset. It is through the suffering experienced
so visibly by Granados's character that the director manages to express
his contempt for the status-obsessed middleclasses.
Granados portrays her character's relentless martyrdom with commendable
restraint and finesse - so intensely does she compel us to her identify
with her that we cannot help loathing her male tormenters - the husband
who controls and exploits her, the lover who abandons her and the son
who callously rejects her. Joaquin Cordero and Xavier Loyá
both turn in creditable performances as the two sons, the former's
intense, brooding persona making an effective contrast with the
latter's natural air of innocence and amiability. Cordero would
later star in Buñuel's
The
River and Death (1955); Loya had already featured in the
director's
La Hija del engaño
(1951) and would subsequently appear in
The Exterminating Angel (1962),
unquestionably the greatest film of Buñuel's Mexican
period.
A Woman Without Love
may appear slight compared with this surreal masterpiece but it is far
too good to overlook.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Luis Buñuel film:
Cela s'appelle l'aurore (1956)
Film Synopsis
Don Carlos Montero is a successful antiques dealer in Mexico. He
is proud of his position in society and he governs his wife Rosario and
young son Carlitos with an iron hand. After he has been
reprimanded by his father for stealing, Carlitos runs away from home
and meets a kind engineer in the forests nearby. The engineer,
Julio Mistral, returns the boy to his parents and becomes a close
friend of Rosario. Without her husband's knowledge, Rosario
begins a passionate love affair with Mistral, but she is forced to end
the relationship when Montero's health takes a sudden turn for the
worse. Twenty years later, Montero's two grown-up sons have just
graduated from medical school. With money provided by their
father, Carlitos and his younger brother Miguel plan to found a modern
health clinic. However, the scheme falls through when Montero
finds another use for his money. Coincidentally, this is the
moment at which Miguel learns he has inherited a fortune from Julio
Mistral, a man he has never met. Carlitos rejects Miguel's offer
to fund his dream project with his windfall and becomes consumed with
envy. It isn't long before he deduces the truth about the
mysterious benefactor. There can only be one reason why Mistral
left his entire estate to Miguel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.