Film Review
The two outstanding examples of transcendent cinema are Carl Theodor
Dreyer's
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc
(1928) and Robert Bresson's
Au hasard Balthazar
(1966).
Masterpieces of unrivalled purity and poignancy, these
two films use the medium of cinema in the most direct and eloquent way
to express the most basic truths of human experience. Both films
invoke the Passion of Christ, in the one case through the martyrdom of
Joan of Arc, in the other through the lifetime's suffering of a donkey,
but their interest isn't limited solely to the religiously
minded. What these two unique films show us is that suffering is
an essential part of our existence, the thing that ennobles us and
allows us to become far more than mere creatures of flesh and
blood. Denied our capacity to feel physical and emotional pain,
we would cease to be human.
Bresson offered his own account of the trial of Joan of Arc, in
Procès de Jeanne d'Arc
(1962), a film that perhaps pays too much attention to historical
detail and consequently lacks the purity and searing emotional power of
Dreyer's film.
Bresson may himself have been aware of this
shortcoming and sought to correct it in his next film,
Au hasard Balthazar, a similar kind
of passion play in which the central character is a dumb animal, a
donkey named Balthazar. Bresson claimed that the film was
inspired by Dostoyevsky's
The Idiot
but a more readily apparent reference is the life of Christ.
Together with Bresson's subsequent
Mouchette (1967), these films
form a neat trilogy where, in each case, the main protagonist attains
sanctity through the suffering he or she must endure at the hands of
men.
In common with virtually all of Robert Bresson's films,
Au hasard Balthazar has a
deceptive simplicity which masks its underlying complexity. The
relationship between the characters only becomes apparent through repeated
viewings, and each time you watch the film it leaves a more profound
impression. There are essentially two types of character in
the film, those who inflict pain and those who meekly receive it. The
cruelty that is meted out to Balthazar mirrors that which is borne by
the majority of the human characters, in particular the little girl
Marie who was the donkey's first and kindest owner. As they
follow their respective paths, Marie and Balthazar resemble one another
increasingly. Neither has much control over what happens to
him/her and both become willing recipients of cruelty and
humiliation. Yet whilst we sympathise with Balthazar, our
feelings for Marie remain lukewarm - her miseries are self-inflicted
and, unlike the donkey, she has the option of lessening her suffering,
if she makes the right choices (which she never does).
In Christian terms, Balthazar is in the camp of the righteous, an
inherently noble creature that will ultimately be rewarded for his
years of patiently endured suffering, whilst Marie, the unrepentant
sinner, faces almost certain damnation (at best, a life of pointless
misery). Marie's father likewise brings misfortune on his own
head (through a misguided sense of pride which leads him to ruin and
disgrace) and is just as deserving of the pain he causes for
himself. Those that wilfully inflict torment are damned by default,
none more so than the malicious biker Gérard who dishes out most
of the cruelty. The Devil in human form, Gérard exists
only to cause others pain, and cinema has rarely given us an image more
shocking than the sequence in which he casually sets fire to
Balthazar's tail. People like Gérard and the cynical old
farmer who abuses Marie hold no interest for us, as they clearly have
no prospect of redemption.
Bresson's striving for veracity in his art (as opposed to the forced
sentimentality that prevails in most cinema) attains its apogee in
Au hasard Balthazar, with the
result that it is paradoxically both his most profound and most
accessible film. By this stage, Bresson had long dispensed with
professional actors, preferring to mould his
acteurs-modèles from
individuals with no prior acting experience.
The 18-year-old Anne
Wiazemsky was ideal for this purpose, and her portrayal of the innocent
yet easily corruptible Marie is one of the most striking in Bresson's
entire oeuvre, all the more powerful because it conveys the distress of
a confused teenager without so much as a hint of surface
emotionality. Born a Russian princess, Wiazemsky is one of the
few actors to have enjoyed a successful acting career after debuting
with Bresson. She married the director Jean-Luc Godard, having
appeared in several of his films (
La Chinoise,
Week End
and
Tout va bien) and subsequently
made a name for herself as a writer (following in the footsteps of her
illustrious grandfather, François Mauriac). The
film's other notable performance is provided by François Lafarge
- his Gérard (the evil biker) makes a shocking contrast with
Wiazemsky's vulnerable Marie. Despite his obvious screen
presence, Lafarge's subsequent film career was brief and
desultory.
Whilst it abounds with Christian imagery and somehow manages to
encapsulate the essence of Christianity in one short, powerfully moving
film,
Au hasard Balthazar is
not an exclusively religious work. It is a remarkable piece of
humanist art with a universal appeal, with as much to say to
non-believers as it does to devout Catholics. Balthazar, the
overworked, brutally treated beast of burden, may first appear to be
some kind of Christ-like ideal, but what he really represents is the
tragedy of mankind, condemned to endure an existence that is
inescapably cruel and unjust - "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and
short", as one eminent 17th century philosopher put it. Far from
being depressingly pessimistic, Bresson's cogent statement of mortal
suffering resounds with hope. In those devastatingly poignant
closing images of the film it is not sadness we feel, but a sharp sting
of transcendence that tells us how necessary it is to suffer and
experience pain. It is only through the miracle of suffering that
we can appreciate life and become better individuals. Without it,
we would surely be in Hell - anaesthetised zombies, leading empty lives
without hope or purpose.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Robert Bresson film:
Mouchette (1967)
Film Synopsis
Shortly after he is born in a rural part of France, a donkey is adopted
by a small girl named Marie, who christens him Balthazar and treats him
as a treasured plaything. When she is 14, Marie falls in love
with Jacques, a boy of her own age, and they agree that one day they
will marry. Unfortunately, after the death of his mother, Jacques
must leave the region with his father, who asks Marie's father to take
over the running of his farm. Marie begins a relationship with a
thuggish biker, Gérard, who amuses himself by inflicting cruelty
on Balthazar. Marie's father soon runs into financial difficulty
and is forced to sell Balthazar to a local baker, who uses the donkey
to deliver bread. Worked to exhaustion, Balthazar is passed on to
a drunken vagrant, who nurses him back to health. After a brief
spell as a circus attraction, Balthazar ends up as a working animal for
a mean-spirited farmer. By now the donkey is old and weary, but
Gérard has one further use for him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.