Film Review
One of the unfortunate consequences of the French New Wave is that it allowed
pretentiousness to run rampant amongst a category of filmmaker which reckoned
it could pass off cheap tat as high art merely by emulating the style of
the Nouvelle Vague trendsetters. The most visible among these crass
imitators was Roger Vadim, whose early (accidental) successes with films
such as
Et Dieu... créa
la femme (1956) blinded him (and others who should have known better)
to the sublime vacuity of his notion of cinema. Vadim not only directed
several New Wave-like abominations, he also produced a fair number, including
the hideously self-conscious
Et Satan conduit le bal. Scripted
by Vadim, this was the first and only film to be directed by Grisha M. Dabat,
and you don't have to be the world's greatest film critic to see why.
Raoul Coutard's distinctive cinematography - which frequently calls to mind
his previous work on Jacques Demy's
Lola
(1960) - brings a thin veneer of New Wave modernity to the film, but this
is as far as the film's true artistry extends. In every other respect,
Et Satan conduit le bal reeks of shallow pretense, preening itself
as absurdly as a five year old girl trying to glam herself up in her older
sister's make-up and glad rags. It would have required a far lesser cast for
the true horror of the film to hit home, but garnished with some of the most
charismatic and glamorous young actors of the day, it somehow gets away with
murder - literally, as it happens.
Vadim's motivation for making the film is all too apparent - to make a star
of his latest teen conquest, Catherine Deneuve, exactly as the Svengali filmmaker
had done with his previous unwitting Trilby, Brigitte Bardot. What
better setting for the stunningly beautiful 19-year-old actress than a coastal
setting similar to the one that had elevated the buxom Bardot to the status
of international sex goddess, surrounded by other tasty eye candy in the
form of Jacques Perrin, Bernadette Lafont and Françoise Brion?
With such a seductive cast, surely the plot and direction would take care
of themselves? Mistaking himself for Jean-Luc Godard, Vadim is happy
to allow his ensemble of beautiful people to laze about contemplating their
own and each other's navels as they linger languorously in a film that not
only knows that it has no reason to be, but positively seems to revel in
the fact.
It's hard to fathom the presence of Jacques Doniol-Valcroze in this film.
Another (somewhat more respectable) satellite figure of the French New Wave
(and, incidentally, one of the co-founders of the
Cahiers du cinéma),
Doniol-Valcroze looks worryingly at home playing the boring intellectual
alongside his real-life partner Françoise Brion. Both bring
a semblance of respectability to the film, although ultimately their efforts
are wasted - annihilated by the life-sapping listlessness of the mise-en-scène
and a script that fails abysmally to marry its borrowed B-movie trappings
with its abundance of quasi-intellectual posturing. After this grim
excursion into the barren wastes of abject futility, Doniol-Valcroze and
Brion redeemed themselves handsomely in their subsequent screen collaborations
-
L'Eau à la bouche
(1960),
Le Coeur battant (1961) and
La Dénonciation (1962).
As for Catherine Deneueve, it was Jacques Demy, not Roger Vadim, who made
her a star, with
Les
Parapluies de Cherbourg (1964). Demy also partnered the actress
with Jacques Perrin far more successfully in two subsequent films -
Les Demoiselles de
Rochefort (1967) and
Peau d'Âne
(1970).
Et Satan conduit le bal is one of those entries in Deneuve's
filmography it is probably best to draw a discrete veil over - until such
time as science comes up with the means of deleting it from all of our memories.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Yvan, a 20-year-old drifter, is idling away his days in the south of France
in the company of his naive girlfriend Emmanuelle. Stony broke, he
sponges off Jean-Claude, the son of a rich businessman, and stays at his
villa with Emmanuelle. Completing the sextet of friends are Jean-Claude's
girlfriend Isabelle, a free-spirited young actress, and another couple that
comprises Éric, a successful writer, and his wife Monica. Yvan
gets himself into trouble by joyriding in a car he 'borrows' from a garage
and subsequently smashes up. A sinister-looking stranger offers to
clear Yvan's debts if he ends his relationship with Emmanuelle. So
begins a dangerous game of seduction and manipulation that will end tragically
for one of the six friends...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.