Film Review
By the time he had completed
Mauprat (1926) and
Six
et demi, onze (1927), the first two films he made for the
film production company he had set up in 1925, Jean Epstein was already
in financial difficulty. Unable to raise the capital for another
feature he had to reign back his ambitions and content himself with a
short - more accurately a
moyen
métrage - for his third independently made film.
Rather than limiting his creativity, the prospect of impending
insolvency seemed to act as a spur, motivating Epstein to explore his
cinematic ideas (notably his theory of
photogénie) with renewed
vigour - much like a condemned man making the most of the days he has
left to him. The outcome of this frenetic burst of artistry was
two of the director's most highly regarded films -
La Glace à trois faces
(a.k.a.
The Three-Sided Mirror)
and
La Chute de la maison Usher
(1928).
A short story by Paul Morand (first published in
L'Europe galante in 1925) provided
the bare bones narrative for
La
Glace à trois faces, a simple fable that Epstein
transforms into an intense hallucinatory experience through some
dazzling camerawork and innovative editing. Watching the film is
like taking a trip into another dimension, so brazenly does it dispense
with the usual cinematic conventions as it unleashes a radically new
concept of film storytelling, one that is driven by feeling and
perspective rather than pure incident. The striking image of the
smashed mirror in
Six et demi, onze
is what the film resembles - a montage of scattered fragments
reflecting multiple points of view which ultimately reveal four
strikingly different portraits of the same individual. We like to
think that what we see is an objective truth that everyone can agree
on.
La Glace à trois
faces reminds us that this is not how things are - everything we
observe is a distorted shadow of the truth, shaped by our own
personality, experiences and aspirations. The idea that all human
experience is innately subjective and should be presented as such in
art was central to the French impressionist movement of the 1920s, and
it would also figure heavily in German expressionism and subsequently
film noir.
Already, as early as
Coeur fidèle (1923),
Jean Epstein had earned his place amongst the elite filmmakers of the
Parisian avant-garde, whose ranks included Marcel L'herbier, Abel Gance
and Dimitri Kirsanoff. Epstein was as much influenced by Gance's
startling use of rhythmic editing in
La Roue (1923) as he was by the
impressionists' use of in-camera effects such as superimposition to
express the inner states of their protagonists. By the time he
came to make films for his own production company, Epstein had learned
to combine these various cinematographic devices into a uniquely
subjective form of cinema that powerfully captures the essence of human
experience, perhaps more so than any other form of cinematic
expression. In
La Glace
à trois faces he attains the zenith of his art, putting
images on the screen that make us feel we are inside the heads of the
protagonists - not just seeing the world through their eyes but
actually experiencing their emotions. We can but marvel at
Epstein's use of close-up (massive close-ups that often only show a
small portion of a face), camera movement (taken to dizzying extremes)
and editing (including some bizarre jump-cutting in one
sequence). These make watching his film an intensely visceral
experience.
In Epstein's hands, the camera lens is not just an instrument for
passively recording what happens in the physical world. It
becomes the eye of the protagonist, showing us what he or she chooses
to see, and in a way that reflects the observer's character and
emotional state. This is at once apparent in the first three
segments of the film, where Epstein differentiates his three female
characters more by how they view the world around them than by what
they look like or how they act. The first woman is a socialite
who resembles a bird in cage (an impression that is reinforced by
Pierre Kefer's boldly geometric Deco set design), a soul yearning for a
strong man to come along and make her his prisoner. The second is
a domineering artist who needs to control others - this is why she
regards her lover as something she can shape and mould according to her
designs. Suitor number three is a waif-like commoner whose
innocence and optimistic outlook is stressed by the fact that we see
her mostly out of doors, in sunny river settings that evoke the
impressionist painters Renoir and Manet. The women reveal
themselves through the distinct worlds they inhabit, and this is also
reflected in how they regard their lover - the dominant male, the
submissive weakling, the insouciant romantic. How odd that they
should see the same man in such different ways.
Meanwhile, as the women happily delude themselves as to their lover's
true nature, Epstein gives us the occasional glimpse of his true
persona. In one of the film's more striking sequences, the camera
locks on to his point of view as he drives his beloved sports car out
of an indoor car park. As the surroundings revolve around him,
windows becoming large rectangles of light flying past, he resembles a
prisoner desperately seeking escape from a suffocating nightmare
reality. The sequence is later mirrored in the one where the man
rows a boat on a river, adding a bitter strain to what would otherwise
pass as a cheery excursion in an idyllic romance. The three women
each believes she can possess her man, but, as the fourth segment makes
clear, he is not one to be captured. A man in a fast car is not
one who is likely to be tethered by the bonds of matrimony, so by going
off on a mad sprint in his souped up roadster our hero not only
reaffirms his freedom, he also defies the gods by asserting that he is
master of his own destiny. The gods are not amused by this show
of hubris and the outcome is all too predictable.
It is in this, the film's dramatic highpoint, that Epstein slams his
foot down on the accelerator pedal and throws just about everything he
has into the creative melting pot to make the hero's lunatic joy ride
as hair-raising as possible. A frenzy of fast moving
point-of-view shots are edited together at a vertiginous pace to create
the image of a man who is so drunk with his illusion of freedom that
nothing matters. Past, present and future are all subsumed into a
single sustained moment of bliss that has a sweet taste of eternity
about it. Epstein's own love of fast cars is well-documented and
he had already employed similar sequences of a car being driven at
speed in
Le Lion des Mogols (1924) and
Six et demi, onze. In these
earlier films, however, the impression given is one of an intense love
of life, whereas in
La Glace
à trois faces it is the danger, his proximity to death,
that the hero seems to relish. The glimpse of a bird on a telegraph
wire (eerily reminiscent of Hitchcock's
The Birds) prefigures the
inevitable tragedy. Epstein then follows this with one of his
most lyrical uses of superimposition, a static shot of the mangled
remains of the hero laid over another shot that slowly tracks up
towards the heavens. As his ghost then fades from the three-sided
mirror that has held him captive, we can finally be assured he has
found the freedom he craved. The prisoner is no more.
Of the films that Jean Epstein made,
La
Glace à trois faces is one that was most enthusiastically
received on its original release. Following a reappraisal of the
director's work in the 1950s, the film had a profound impact on a new
generation of filmmakers and notably influenced two of the most highly
regarded films of the French New Wave era - Alain Resnais's
L'Année dernière à
Marienbad (1961) and Chris Marker's
La
Jétée (1962). For his next film,
La Chute de la maison Usher
(1928), Epstein would develop his idea of photogénie further
and, in doing so, succeeded in crafting the most visually poetic and
unsettling work of his career.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Jean Epstein film:
La Chute de la maison Usher (1928)