Film Review
Pascale Ferran brings a uniquely feminine sensitivity to this daring
adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's novel
John
Thomas and Lady Jane, the second and arguably best version of
his controversial
Lady Chatterley's
Lover. In contrast to many previous tellings of this
familiar story of sexual reawakening, this one is most definitely seen
from the perspective of the central heroine. This is crucial
because the story is fundamentally about Lady Chatterley's experience
of physical and spiritual rebirth, her rediscovery of the joys of
living through an illicit sexual encounter and not, as is it sometimes
presented, a tale of conscious infidelity that is prosecuted merely to
gratify an urge that her crippled husband cannot satisfy. This is
presumably how Lawrence intended his novel to be read and, if so, he
would have been immensely gratified by this film, which is probably the
most faithful screen adaptation of his novels to date (even if the
dialogue is entirely in French and the setting is a poor approximation
to an English mining town).
Remarkably, given the maturity and sophistication shown in this film,
Lady Chatterley is only the third
full full-length film to be directed by Pascale Ferran. She won
acclaim for her first two features,
Petits arrangements avec les morts
(1994) and
L'Âge des possibles
(1995), but has been curiously absent from the world of cinema for the
past decade.
Lady
Chatterley represents a remarkable return for a relatively
unknown filmmaker who, from what we see here, clearly has much more to
contribute to French cinema. The film was hailed at the
Césars in 2007, being nominated for nine awards and winning
five, in the categories: Best Film, Best Actress (Marina Hands), Best
Adaptation, Best Cinematography and Best Costumes.
The main reason why this film is so effective, and so compelling
(despite its daunting two and half hour runtime), is because it focuses
our attention on the relationship that is at the heart of the novel,
that between Constance Chatterley and the gamekeeper (here named
Parkin). Other characters are barely developed and even
Constance's crippled husband (superbly played by Hippolyte Girardot) is
little more than a dramatic foil, not someone we can claim to know
having watched the film. With a Rohmer-esque minimalism, the film
concerns itself only with how Constance and Parkin meet, fall in love
and discover that they cannot live apart. All other plot
developments are compressed (often with a brief descriptive caption) or
eliminated altogether.
What is most interesting about this film is how Constance and Parkin
are presented. At the outset, neither character has any outward
sign of sexuality and there us nothing to suggest they are intended for
one another. Constance is seemingly as starched and repressed as
her prim Bourgeois petticoats and bonnets; the lowly Parkin has little
more charisma and joie de vivre than a dull middle-aged bank
clerk. Yet the ice soon thaws and Constance and Parkin's true
natures slowly begin to emerge. They realise that they each share
a common need and from the first glimmerings of their mutual
attraction, love begins to blossom. Animal lust is what brings
them together, but this is merely the catalyst for something profound
and wonderful that ultimately makes it impossible for them to
separate. Through Pasacle Ferran's deft direction and the
appropriately modest performances from Marina Hands and Jean-Louis
Coullo'ch, this
Lady Chatterley
captures precisely the poignancy and immutable truth that Lawrence
strived to convey in his great novel.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
England, 1921. Lady Constance Chatterley is a prisoner in a
dead, passionless marriage. She is still devoted to her husband,
Clifford, now a ruin of a man, paralysed by the injuries he sustained
on the Flanders battlefields. But a part of her, that most
wondrous part of her femininity, has died. Or so she
thinks. Whilst exploring her husband's vast country estate she
comes across Parkin, the gamekeeper, just as he is bathing. The
meeting awakens something deep within Constance, the shadow of a desire
she had almost forgotten. Parkin is equally drawn to her,
and the inevitable happens...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.