Film Review
In the 1970s, director Michel Deville turned away
from the light whimsical comedies that had brought him mainstream
success in the previous decade (films such as
Ce
soir ou jamais,
Adorable menteuse and
À cause, à cause d'une femme)
and started to make films (in various genres) that were of a much, much
darker hue.
Le Mouton
enragé (1974) was the first in a series of anti-bourgeois
satires that Deville made in the 1970s and 80s which take a vicious
sideswipe at the double standards and immorality of France's
materialistically minded middle classes. The two other
notable films in this series are
Eaux profondes (1981) and
Péril en la demeure
(1985) - along with
Le Mouton
enragé, these form a loose trilogy which is widely
considered to be among Deville's best work.
Le Mouton enragé is not
only one of Deville's most cynical films - it is nothing less than an
all-out assault on the disgraceful art of social climbing - it is also
one of his funniest, although virtually all of the humour is of a dark
and sour temperament. Christopher Frank's screen adaptation of
Roger Blondel's novel is rich in caustic one-liners and rejoinders, but
beneath the wildly exaggerated caricature and fanciful situations the
unwholesome truths about the bourgeois malaise are all too easily
recognised.
Le Mouton
enragé is a social satire with teeth - sharp, hungry,
blood-stained teeth. If this film were an animal it would have to
be a velociraptor, one with a big belly and a keenly developed sense of irony.
As in all of Michel Deville's films,
Le
Mouton enragé boasts an impeccable cast. No actor
was better suited to play the central protagonist than Jean-Louis
Trintignant, an actor who is naturally shy but who is also equipped
with a devastating charm, which he puts to deadly use in this
film. In one of his best comedic roles, Trintignant is
irresistibly funny but he also manages to make his unsympathetic
character - a sheep who gradually turns into a wolf - convincing and
likeable. It helps that he is supported by a remarkable ensemble
of talent that includes not only stars such as Romy Schneider (whom he
had previously partnered in Alain Cavalier's
Le Combat dans l'île) and
Jane Birkin, but also fine character performers such as Georges Wilson,
Henri Garcin and Jean-François Balmer.
Romy Schneider and Jane Birkin are as stunningly sensual as ever
(Deville exploits their strengths to the absolute maximum), but it is
Trintignant's scenes with another great acting talent, Jean-Pierre
Cassel, that are the most compelling. As the crippled writer who,
like a latterday Mephistopheles, guides Trintignant towards wealth and
success, Cassel gives the film its bitter, twisted edge, but it is
through his eyes that we see the darker truths that make up the film's
underlying moral. The human consequences of self-serving
opportunism are powerfully exposed in the film's acrid denouement and,
at this point, the joke suddenly turns very sour indeed. The
director of
Le Mouton enragé certainly
lives up to his name. When it comes to baiting the bourgeoisie,
Michel Deville does so with a Satanic relish and shows he can be
something of a devil.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Michel Deville film:
Le Dossier 51 (1978)
Film Synopsis
Nicolas Mallet is a modest bank employee whose lack of personal
ambition is matched by a crippling lack of self-confidence. He
surprises himself when, one day, he bottles up the courage to chat up a
young woman in the street. He is even more surprised when that
woman, Marie-Paule, allows him to sleep with her. When Nicholas
relates this improbable escapade to his old school friend Claude Fabre,
a disabled and bitter writer, the latter offers him a strange
proposal. Under Fabre's guidance, Nicholas will be propelled up
the social ladder, seducing women to advance his career and allow him
to amass a huge personal fortune. Nicholas agrees to participate
in the mad adventure and, once he has given up his cosy bank job, he
makes a start by seducing Roberte, the wife of a respected
academic. Through Marie-Paule, Nicholas then becomes the personal
associate of Lourceuil, a wealthy businessman. To further his
political ambitions, Lourceuil puts Nicholas in charge of a newspaper,
bought from a rich old widow. Nicholas's run of good fortune
cannot last forever, and when the bodies begin to pile up
Nicholas finally sees the downside of his Satanic pact...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.