Film Review
A year after
Le Repos du guerrier, director
Roger Vadim was back with a new Franco-Italian drama entitled
Le Vice et la vertu, which came out
in Parisian cinemas on the 1st March 1963. Based on the Marquis
de Sade's novel
Justine,
Vadim rises to the challenge of re-imagining Sade's characters in a
fictitious story, transposed to the Nazi Occupation of WWII.
After the film's premiere, the film was condemned both by the critics
and by fans of the Marquis de Sade, who were unimpressed by Vadim's
attempts to associate the writer with the traumatic period of the
Occupation.
Whilst his direction is sometimes impressive, Vadim appears to be a
little overwhelmed by the subject and his awkward attempt to deliver a
kinky philosophical metaphor. His secondary characters often
appear inconsistent, something that weakens the story and undermines
its conclusion. The vice and virtue of the title are exemplified
by Justine and Juliette, two sisters who are placed in opposition to
one other and who both become prisoners in the web of Nazi intrigue.
True to his reputation as a discoverer of talented actresses, Vadim
offers the first major role to Sylvie Dorléac, better known as
Catherine Deneuve. This film led Deneuve to be chosen by director
Jacques Demy for his film
Les Parapluies de cherbourg.
In common with several of her early film appearances, Deneuve is not
always at her best but she is extraordinarily beautiful, all the more
so thanks to Vadim's insistence that her hair colour be blond (thereby
creating the actress's iconic look). Vadim chose blond to
emphasise the virtuous nature of Justine's character, someone who
refuses to give in to the enemy. Annie Girardot is equally
impressive in her role as Juliette, the less noble of the two sisters,
someone who is prepared to do anything to survive. It would
appear that Vadim is torn between creating symbolic characters or
believable women, since Girardot is not exactly vice incarnate and
Deneuve is not really a model of pristine virtue.
Robert Hossein is fabulous as the fearless and relentless SS colonel
whose silences creates a mood of anxiety. German actor O.E. Hasse
leaves a deep impression as an imposing SS General. Philippe
Lemaire is cast against type but is perfect as a German officer. The
supporting cast includes Howard Vernon, Henri Virlojeux, Michel de
Ré, Georges Poujouly (discovered in René Clément's
Jeux
interdits) and Italian actress Luciana Paluzzi (seen as the
villainous bond girl in
Thunderball). Fifty years
on,
Le vice et la vertu
may be able to pass itself off as a classic wartime drama, but it is
visibly weakened by Vadim's lack of boldness and offers a
reinterpretation of the Marquis de Sade's universe that is too crude
and decorative to be entirely satisfying.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
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Next Roger Vadim film:
La Ronde (1964)
Film Synopsis
Paris 1944. Justine is about to about to marry Jean, a member of
the resistance, when the latter is suddenly arrested by the
Gestapo. To save Jean, Justine appeals to her sister Juliette,
who is the mistress of a German officer, General von Bamberg, to help
her. When Jean succeeds in escaping from his captors, Justine
mistakenly believes that this is through Juliette's efforts and she
goes to thank her sister. She unwittingly witnesses the killing
of von Bamberg and ends up being sent to a Tyrolean castle to
service the lustful desires of the Nazis. Meanwhile, Juliette
becomes the mistress of the S.S. officer Colonel Schorndorf, a ruthless
opponent of Hitler who took great pleasure in arranging von Bamberg's
death...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.