Film Review
La Drôlesse, Jacques
Doillon's fifth film, is among the director's most beguiling, a
minimalist drama involving two innocents enacting a kidnapping fantasy
which seems harmless but which, from a detached adult standpoint, would
appear deeply disturbing, in much the same way as René
Clément's
Jeux interdits (1952).
Doillon is one of those rare filmmakers who not only has an affinity
with marginalised and disturbed youngsters, but also an ability to draw
us into their world and make us see things from their perspective,
without resorting to sentiment milking or other cheap gimmicks.
La Drôlesse is one of
Doillon's simplest films and yet it leaves a profound impact, making us
aware of the profound gulf that exists between the mind of an adult,
which sees evil in everything, and that of a child, for whom everything
is a game untainted by cynicism and moral prejudice.
Doillon is renowned for getting superb performances from his child
actors, and in
La Drôlesse
he is particularly well-served by Madeleine Desdevises, an enchanting
eleven year old who brings both charm and a startling reality to the
film. Had she not died three years later from cancer Desdevises
would surely have enjoyed a successful acting career. How tragic
that this should be her one film appearance, her arresting performance
beautifully complemented by that of her older co-star, Claude
Hébert, who had previously distinguished himself in a similar
role in René Allio's
Moi Pierre Rivière...
(1976). There is something magical about the on-screen rapport
between Hébert and Desdevises, as if they are the most vivid
characters in a children's fairy tale,
Beauty and the Beast being the one
that most readily springs to mind.
The plot of
La Drôlesse
can be summarised in one sentence - it is all about the developing
relationship between two unloved outsiders, a retarded 20-year-old
François and the 11-year-old girl Mado he abducts and
befriends. From the outset, Doillon compels us to sympathise with
these two unhappy individuals who seem equally starved of affection and
yet are so manifestly capable of giving it. It is with wondrous
ease that François manages to persuade Mado into allowing him to
abduct her, and even when Mado has the opportunity to escape she
chooses not to take it. Far from being a prisoner-captive
relationship, what develops between François and Mado is a
child's chaste imitation of a marriage, and it is soon apparent that
the younger girl, the most intelligent of the two, is the one who is in
command of the situation.
Mado's ambiguous nature, the innocent who is not quite so innocent as
she seems, is alluded to in the film's title, which has a double
meaning that is lost on a non-French audience. In the Midi region
of southern France
une drôlesse
means 'a little girl' but more generally it translates as 'a woman of
loose morals' (hence the film's English title
The Hussy). It is
François who is the real innocent, a young man with the
mentality of a little boy who sees nothing wrong in imprisoning a young
girl in his attic lair and who invents the most preposterous fantasy
(which she probably sees through) to keep her there. The
innocence that Hébert brings to his portrayal has a sustained,
almost heart-breaking purity that becomes increasingly less evident in
Desdevises' more worldly wise Mado.
At one crucial point during her 'imprisonment', Mado practically orders
François to give her a baby. François's reaction to
this is not just one of shock, he is disappointed and embarrassed, but
being a pure soul incapable of adult vice he rejects the bitter apple
that his Eve holds out to him. Suddenly the game has become more
serious, too adult for him to want to play any more. This delicately ironic
re-interpretation of the Fall of Man ends abruptly with a brief but
touching coda in which François and Mado re-enact their first
meeting, this time under the judgemental gaze of adults. The
latter do not see what we have seen, a harmless game in which both
characters are complicit, but a crime committed by an unhinged young man
who is about to face a far crueller form of incarceration.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Doillon film:
La Fille prodigue (1981)
Film Synopsis
Mado is an eleven-year-old girl who, ignored by her sisters and
maltreated by her mother, leads a solitary, loveless existence.
One day, she is accosted by a young man, François, who forces
her to accompany him back to his home, a bare attic room in his
parents' house. François's life is even more
pitiable than Mado's. His mother and stepfather treat him like an
animal and, unable to find work, he survives on the pittance he earns
by returning bottles and selling wild mushrooms. François
treats Mado as his prisoner and warns her that if she tries to escape
she will fall into the hands of others who will harm her. Far
from fearing her captor, Mado grows to like him and regards him as a
replacement father. She even asks François if he will give
her a baby but the young man insists she is too young...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.