Film Review
Too often overlooked and unfairly wrtten off on account of its
seemingly morbid preoccupation with death,
La Chambre verte is among
François Truffaut's most hauntingly lyrical films and also one
that is among his most personal and revealing.
Since the untimely death of his mentor and spiritual father André Bazin in 1958,
Truffaut was troubled by the loss of those who were close to him and
those whom he admired, and it was this inner struggle to reconcile
himself with the death of others that led him to make his most
idiosyncratic film. In a similar vein to
L'Histoire d'Adèle H.
(1975),
La Chambre verte
revolves around a single character - a writer of orbitaries played by
Truffaut himself - who falls prey to a destructive idée
fixe. On this occasion, the amour fou that takes hold of the
protagonist is not a romantic passion but an all-consuming desire to
preserve the memory of the dead, an obsession which causes the
protagonist to lose contact with the real world and prevents him from
starting a new life with a young woman who shares his respect for the
dead, but not in the same obsessive manner.
Truffaut originally conceived the film in 1970, inspired by the Henry
James story
The Altar of the Dead.
It was almost a decade before he finally got round to making the film,
at a time when he was deeply perturbed by the deaths of Henri Langlois
(founder of the Cinémathèque Française) and
Roberto Rossellini.
Borrowing ideas from other Henry James
stories (
The Beast in the Jungle
and
The Friends of the Friends)
Truffaut and his faithful screenwriter Jean Gruault developed a darkly
introspective portrait of a solitary man who, still disturbed by his
experiences as a soldier in World War I, is driven to preserve the
memory of his young wife, who died shortly after their wedding.
Truffaut used the film to honour the memory of one of his personal
heroes, Maurice Jaubert, a talented composer who scored many notable
films of the 1930s (for such luminaries as Marcel Carné and Jean
Vigo) but died whilst on active service in
WWII. Truffaut employed Jaubert's music in many of his
films, but never as effectively as on
La
Chambre verte, which appears to have been created especially to
showcase the work of France's greatest film composer. Much of the
poetry of the film stems from Jaubert's extraordinarily evocative
music, which is so expressive and so perfectly married with Nestor
Almendros' cinematography that the dialogue is almost superfluous.
Although he later had reservations over playing the lead character,
Truffaut is perfect for the role of the morbidly introspective Julien
Davenne and gives what is possibly his most arresting and poignant
performance. Like Truffaut himself, Davenne is a man who has a
greater affinity with the dead than with the living, and his inability
to move on and accept the passing of his loved ones is so powerfully
rendered that the film can hardly fail to leave a lasting
impression.
The vitality and humanity that Nathalie Baye brings
to her character make a striking contrast with the numbed
self-absorption of Truffaut's - they appear to be living in different
worlds - and yet there is a very tangible sense of connection between
the two characters, a
reminder perhaps of the inviolable link between the living and the dead.
Whilst
La Chambre verte met
with almost universal critical acclaim when it was first released in
France in 1978, it proved to be a spectacular commercial flop. The
film's sombre subject matter made it a hard sell and audiences gave
Truffaut a resounding thumbs down, something that the director was
deeply hurt by and which caused a sudden deterioration in his physical
and mental health. More crucially, the film's disastrous
performance at the box office brought an end to Truffaut's partnership
with Artistes Associés (the French subsidiary of United
Artists), which had financed his films for over a decade. Unable
to find a backer for the films he had planned to make after
La Chambre verte, Truffaut had no
option but to ensure that his next film would be a crowd-pleasing
hit. It was time for Antoine Doinel to come out of mothballs for
his final screen adventure...
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next François Truffaut film:
L'Amour en fuite (1979)
Film Synopsis
In late 1920s France, Julien Davenne devotes his life to the memory of the dead.
He writes impassioned obituaries for an obscure newspaper and has converted his house's
Green Room into a mausoleum to his wife, who died ten years earlier shortly after their
marriage. When the room is destroyed in a fire, Davenne's obsession drives him to
renovate an abandoned chapel in the cemetery where his wife is buried. With a sympathetic
friend, Cecilia, he intends to build a memorial to his wife and all his dead friends.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.