Film Review
Le Plaisir, Max Ophüls'
follow-up to his well-received love merry-go-round
La Ronde
(1950), adopts a similar episodic structure, this time comprising three
segments on the theme of pleasure taken from short stories by Guy de
Maupassant. Whilst pleasure is easy to come by, the film argues,
happiness is a much rarer jewel which few have the privilege to
possess. The longest segment, based on
La Maison Tellier, is the film's
centrepiece, one that colourfully evokes the world of the French
impressionist painters Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Auguste Renoir
with its vibrant sketch of Parisian nightlife and sun-drenched rural
simplicity. This is book-ended with two much shorter episodes
which together take up less than a third of the runtime and offer a
more melancholic counterpoint to the gay experiences of Madame Tellier
and her girls. The cast list reads like a
Who's Who of French cinema and
includes such legendary performers as Jean Gabin, Danielle Darrieux,
Madeleine Renaud, Simone Simon, Pierre Brasseur, Gaby Morlay and Claude
Dauphin, as well as a plethora of distinguished character actors.
Like
La Ronde, the film is
hopelessly self-indulgent but irresistibly charming, its dramatic
shortcomings amply made up for by its magnificent design
and unwavering sense of fun.
Le Plaisir has long been
acclaimed for its remarkably fluid camera work, which out-does even
Citizen
Kane in its ambition, expressive power and virtuosity.
In the opening segment, the camera literally drags the spectator into
the heart of a bustling dance venue and somehow creates the illusion
that he is caught up in the action, consumed in a wearying frenzy of
dance. In the second segment, the crane-mounted camera makes
voyeurs of us all as it roams up and down the Maison Tellier, lingering by
the windows to allow us to catch a glimpse of the lubricious activities
taking place within its walls. Finally and most dramatically, in
the third segment the camera takes the place of a suicidal character
and throws itself out of an upstairs window, dragging the spectator
with it. Ophüls is by no means the first film director to
use the camera in this way, to make the audience feel they are active
participants rather than passive observers in what is projected onto
the screen, but he goes further than others (perhaps even Hitchcock)
dared in this innovative masterpiece.
Although Max Ophüls had, by this stage in his career, acquired a
certain distinction, on the strength of several notable films he had
made in his native Germany and Hollywood, it wasn't until he moved to
France in the 1950s that his artistic potential was fully
realised.
La Ronde and
Le Plaisir were justly celebrated
for their elaborate stylisation - the camera no longer a mere recording
device but something that had become the most dynamic element of the
film. Ophüls' films derive a balletic grace and momentum
from his trademark long takes with their grand, sweeping camera
movements, a technique which the director would refine to perfection on
his next two films,
Madame de... (1953) and
Lola
Montès (1955). The latter represent not only
the pinnacle of Ophüls' career but impressive landmarks of French
cinema.
Max Ophüls' films were especially praised by those young firebrand
critics who would shortly become leading players in the French New
Wave. Jean-Luc Godard remarked that
Le Plaisir was "the greatest French
Film made since the Liberation" whilst Paul Vecchiali was sufficiently
impressed by Ophüls to comment that his work alone justified the
Lumière brothers' discovery of the moving image. Whilst
such observations have a whiff of hyperbole about them, there is no
doubt that Max Ophüls was a great innovator and auteur who pushed
the boundaries of cinematic expression in his later years.
Le Plaisir may not be the most
polished or the most emotionally engaging of Ophüls' late films,
but it is easily the most experimental and the most daring. One
of the many film directors to have been influenced by
Le Plaisir is Stanley Kubrick, who
pays homage to Ophüls' penchant for uninhibited camera motion in
several of his films, most obviously
The
Shining (1980).
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Max Ophüls film:
Madame de... (1953)
Film Synopsis
The writer Guy de Maupassant recounts three of his short stories to
show that pleasure should not be confused with happiness. In
Le plaisir et la jeunesse (
Le Masque), an old man goes dancing
at the Palais de la danse, wearing a mask to conceal his aged
features. One evening, he collapses through his wild exertions on
the dance floor and is taken home to his long suffering wife by a kindly young
doctor. The latter sees in his patient the sad future that awaits
him. In
Le plaisir et la
pureté (
La Maison
Tellier), the patrons of a popular Parisian brothel are
indignant when their favourite haunt is closed for business one
Saturday. The owner, Madame Tellier, has been invited to attend
the first communion of a relative in the country and has taken her
girls along with her. During the communion, Madame Tellier and
her entourage experience a surge of transcendent feeling which infects
the entire congregation. The next day, it is business as usual
and the girls are back at the Paris brothel, merrily frolicking with
their clients. In
Le plaisir
et la mort (
Le Modèle),
a young artist and his model fall so deeply in love that they decide to
live together. Theirs is a perfectly happy life, until the day
when they begin to get a little too used to each other and start
bickering. In the end, the artist must abandon his muse, but she
has no intention of letting him go. When she realises the
hopelessness of her cause, the model tries to kill herself by throwing
herself out of a window. She survives, but is paralysed.
Stricken with remorse, the artist has no choice but to marry his former
lover and devote the rest of his life to her.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.